Despite behaving more like an Oculus Go game, with its limited gameplay making it, essentially, an interactive 360-degree video, walking through the hauntingly hollow hallways of Affected: The Manor has you constantly on edge and ready to take flight if any of those statues so much as blink.
The Arizona Sunshine Remake balances the charm of its original with updated visuals and gameplay tweaks, but some persistent issues from the past remain—making it both a trip down memory lane and a fresh challenge.
Crashland takes the wave shooter's timeless VR trope and fills it with so much style and substance that it feels almost ready to burst.
Death Horizon: Reloaded has a handful of well-constructed scenes, and the platforming holds real promise.
In Doctor Who: Edge of Time for Oculus Quest, you'll find a definite desire to provide some fitting, well-rounded fan service.
I haven’t felt this immersed in a horror experience since I first saw The Shining as a kid and rushed to turn on the lights.
In Death: Unchained is the Quest iteration of one of PCVR's best-kept secrets. It's a spooky archery game that's been given a lick of paint and additional content and has shaken off its earthly cables.
Inverse is an excellent, well made and polished experience that should provide hours of enjoyment for fans of the genre.
Layers of Fear VR is a mediocre port on Quest. It does provide a few scary moments, a clever premise, and good sound design, however, at least on the Oculus Quest, Layers of Fear VR is also low-resolution and uncomfortable to play.
From the off, it's clear that Lies Beneath has a very polished presentation. Conveyed in a distinctive cel-shaded, comic-strip fashion, it uses the tropes and framing of a graphic novel to tell its narrative and justify its graphical style.
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.
Propagation: Paradise Hotel is a well-made tribute to classic survival horror, with neat gunplay, solid mechanics, some great puzzles and magnificent amounts of atmosphere.















