Metro Awakening masterfully balances action-adventure and horror, creating moments of frantic panic in dark corridors while mutants scurry about. It keeps you perpetually uncomfortable without crossing into overwhelming horror territory.
Into Black offers an impressive mix of exploration, combat, and resource gathering, but is hampered by technical issues and repetitive elements that detract from its initial promise.
Mannequin offers a unique VR multiplayer experience filled with tension and strategic depth, but its future success hinges on updates and a strong community.
Fracked is a game that oozes style and accessibility, serving as an excellent entry point for players new to VR shooters.
Humanity is a cryptic puzzler with a lot of atmosphere, a great set of evolving mechanics, and a wealth of levels and challenges.
Max Mustard is a delightful platforming experience that melds heartfelt nostalgia, rock-solid mechanics, and the wonderment of modern technology.
Assassin's Creed Nexus is a fantastic game that, against all odds, succeeds where many others have stumbled. It brings the gameplay of the older titles to the Quest without all the RPG baggage that had left fans clamoring for something like AC Mirage.
Inverse is an excellent, well made and polished experience that should provide hours of enjoyment for fans of the genre.
Priced at just $9.99, Silhouette will keep you busy for 3–4 hours, more or less, even if some of that time is wasted on occasional hand-tracking issues.
Colossal Cave is a colossal bore. It's a point-and-click port of a text-based game that refuses to acknowledge the medium to which it's been ported.
Linelight is a deceptively simple puzzler that comes in a tiny package at only 250 megabytes. It features around 200 mini-puzzles spread across six levels and, as it says on the figurative 'tin', movement is your only interaction.
Kartoffl offers 60 levels, with secondary objectives of collecting three stars and guiding every potato to safety in each.