The Curious Tale of the Stolen Pets certainly makes a good-faith effort to create a kid-friendly VR puzzler for the Oculus Quest, but it doesn’t go far.
A Fisherman's Tale is a great introduction to VR puzzles and gameplay mechanics, suitable for a broad audience. It may give you a startling new perspective on the little lives of wooden puppets.
A game in which you play a man strapped tightly to a chair, using a laser pointer taped to his forehead, who can only communicate by nodding or shaking his head.
Part game, part theatrical experience, part social world, The Under Presents provides Quest owners with a unique experience in virtual reality.
Like any good vacation, you’ll be sad when Vacation Simulator is over, but because of the enormous amount of activities, you’ll want to check in again.
In Ghost Giant, possibly more than any other game on the Quest to date save Shadow Point, the inquisitive revelation of the narrative is the whole experience.
Down the Rabbit Hole has a unique look to it, and it's quite lovely. You're in the middle of a 360-degree diorama. It's beautiful to look at and vividly colorful.
There's enough in The Room VR: A Dark Matter to reward fans of the series as a whole, whilst being utterly accessible if it's your first time in The Room.
Released at a perfect time, with many of us struggling with the confines and uncertainly of lockdown due to COVID-19, Tetris Effect offers up a transportive, accessible and all-consuming slice of puzzling.
After living on SideQuest for a while, minimalistic puzzler Cubism finally got its real launch on the Oculus Store. We like it.
In Myst, there are locations to explore, books to read and switches and levers to pull, all opening up more of the same and revealing greater mysteries.
Vanishing Grace is full of weird exposition and muddy philosophy, and half-baked ideas that just come off as convoluted nonsense.