The Top 25 Best PSVR 2 Games And Experiences – Spring 2023

Looking to find the best PlayStation VR2 games available on Sony’s new headset? Here’s out full list of the top 25 best PSVR 2 games for PS5. At launch in February 2023, PSVR 2 came running through the door with a fairly hefty library of VR games and exclusive titles. It’s only getting bigger too, with more games launching every week and many more to come. Since launch, we’ve been trying out as many PSVR 2 experiences as possible to put together our list of the best options across the entire library. Across the list, we’ve tried to represent a wide range of titles from different genres, showcasing the best picks in each and ranking all 25 games in ascending order. There’s some obvious picks and first-party exclusives you might expect to make an appearance, but there’s also a pleasant selection of hidden gems from

PSVR 2 Games: Every Announced And Rumored Project

PSVR 2 has been announced and is hopefully coming soon, but what about PSVR 2 games?Note: This article was originally published on January 6 and has since been updated. We’ve got a full rundown of all announced and rumored PSVR 2 games to keep track of. We’ll be keeping this list up to date, so check back often. Harnessing the power of the PS5, PSVR 2 will be capable of much more ambitious games than the original headset, which ran on the PS4. But with the device only just announced, Sony is playing its cards close to its chest when it comes to the software library. So far we have only a handful of fully announced PSVR 2 games, but there are plenty of other titles that are rumored or hinted at to talk about too. This list includes rumored PSVR 2 games and also titles that appear on both

Every PSVR 2 Game Revealed At State Of Play

This week’s State of Play PlayStation Showcase was a big one for PSVR 2.Sony promised a sneak peek of games for its upcoming headset and it didn’t disappoint. In case you’re catching up, here’s every PSVR 2 game announced and shown during the event. Resident Evil 4 Remake (PSVR 2 Supported Content) [embed]https://youtube.com/watch?v=-L1EuRo54pI&feature=oembed&showinfo=0&rel=0&modestbranding=1&iv_load_policy=3&playsinline=1&enablejsapi=1[/embed] Sony kicked off the show with a bang. We got our first look at the anticipated remake of Capcom’s survival horror epic, Resident Evil 4. The game will be a reimagining of the 2005 original with updated controls and new story elements. But the end of the trailer also confirmed that the game with have “PSVR 2 Supported Content”. Note that this doesn’t confirm the full game will be playable inside VR; it sounds like we might get an additional mode or something similar. Of course, you can already play the original Resident Evil 4

No Man’s Sky PSVR 2 Support Confirmed For PS5

The PS5 version of No Man’s Sky will be getting PSVR 2 support.That much was confirmed during Sony’s State of Play broadcast today. We got a brief trailer for the game showing off some of its newer features. No Man’s Sky PSVR 2 Support Confirmed [embed]https://youtube.com/watch?v=hshBk0bxrPU&feature=oembed&showinfo=0&rel=0&modestbranding=1&iv_load_policy=3&playsinline=1&enablejsapi=1[/embed] Of course, No Man’s Sky already supports the original PSVR on PS4 as well as PC VR headsets. Support came to the expansive sci-fi game in an update called No Man’s Sky Beyond in 2019. Every update for the game since then has included VR support. In fact, the PS4 version of No Man’s Sky already includes upgraded visuals for PSVR users if they’re playing on PS5. Either way, the new version of the game is likely to include technical enhancements. Will you play No Man’s Sky on PSVR 2? Let us know in the comments below!

Eyes-On: JDI & Innolux Present A 3K LCD For Compact VR Headsets

At Display Week 2022 JDI and Innolux presented compact 3K LCD panels for VR headsets.Japan Display Inc (JDI) is one of the world’s largest display providers, formed 10 years ago as a merger of the LCD manufacturing divisions of Sony, Toshiba and Hitachi. Innolux is Taiwan’s largest LCD producer. Both new displays are roughly 2.27 inch diagonal, with a refresh rate of 90 Hz and resolution of 3240×3240 – equating to 2016 pixels per inch. The identical specs are likely due to a patent cross licensing agreement between JDI and Innolux. This isn’t the first 3K LCD panel we’ve seen presented by display providers. At 2019’s Display Week AUO presented a 3456×3456 LCD panel with more than 2000 backlight elements to support HDR. However, that panel was larger (2.9 inch) and we haven’t heard anything about it since. In fact, AUO’s booth at this year’s

What’s The Difference Between SideQuest & App Lab?

If you are a Quest owner you probably have heard of SideQuest. If by some miracle you haven’t heard of SideQuest, you are in for a treat.SideQuest is a VR content platform that gives users access to thousands of VR apps, experimental games, demos, and even full VR game releases. But what is App Lab? SideQuest and App Lab often get confused, and in this sponsored post, we will clarify the difference and the relationship between them, as well as explain how you can access thousands of new VR games that are not listed on the official Oculus store. If you missed SideQuest’s first article, check it out at this link. SideQuest SideQuest has been around since the release of Oculus Quest in May 2019, and it has been a valuable part of the VR gaming community ever since. SideQuest allows users to discover thousands of new VR titles,

VR Gamescast: Moss 2 Impressions, VR Storytelling Troubles, Snoop Dogg In The Metaverse

This week on the VR Gamescast we’re talking about Moss: Book 2, Virtual Virtual Reality 2 and more.After a short break, Jamie and Harry are back to round up the latest VR news and reviews. Headlining this week is the reveal that Moss: Book 2 is coming to PSVR 2 on March 31! Jamie’s seen an extended demo of the game – what does he make of it? And why are so many VR games announcing their release dates just weeks before they arrive? [embed]https://youtube.com/watch?v=xkS129auK1s[/embed] Elsewhere, Harry returns to Virtual Virtual Reality 2, a game we’d previously only reviewed in part due to bugs. Now that there’s been a few patches, is the experience much better? And what’s up with VR storytelling? Why is it so much harder to do than traditional gaming and films? We ponder those questions as we also look over what went wrong with

Editorial: Should We Let Mark Zuckerberg Have The ‘Metaverse’?

Here’s how Meta distills the benefits of Mark Zuckerberg’s latest effort to shape modern life: “3D spaces in the metaverse will let you socialize, learn, collaborate and play in ways that go beyond what we can imagine.”We already have multiple VR headsets from different manufacturers for socializing, learning, collaborating, and playing in ways that are impossible to fully grasp until experienced. If VR headsets already do what Zuckerberg’s homepage at Meta describes, and Oculus was almost synonymous with much of this already, why would he abandon Oculus as a brand and move the goal posts out into the future? There’s a bigger role to play in shaping the future of human experience than just shipping better VR systems year after year, and Zuckerberg is taking that role as the head of Meta Platforms. There’s the worsening effects of climate change to contend with as well as the seemingly always-four-years-away dream

HTC Sees Backlash Over Bizarre ‘Viverse’ Concept Trailer

HTC revealed its vision for the future metaverse, branded ‘Viverse’, and the internet did not like it.In a now-pinned tweet, the Vive Twitter account yesterday posted a concept for a virtual ecosystem split across both augmented and virtual reality hardware labeled as Viverse. It suggested this platform would deliver a “future where the impossible becomes possible.” The video itself proposed several broad possibilities for Viverse, from graspable concepts like working out at the gym with your performance displayed on virtual overlays to more outlandish ideas like attending virtual wine tasting sessions and then purchasing said wine using bitcoin. Oh, and there’s of course a bit where a young woman buys an NFT of the ‘Meowna Lisa’ (which is exactly what it sounds like) for her grandma. Check it out in the video below. And, just in case you were wondering, no, that’s not a typo. It’s Viverse, not Viveverse. HTC’s

Somnium Space Plans Modular 2800×2800 Standalone VR Headset With XTAL Maker

Somnium Space is planning to release a new standalone VR headset with the help of XTAL maker, VRgineers.But, wait, who are Somnium Space? You’d be forgiven for not having heard of the company before today, but Somnium has been around for a number of years working on what it claims is “the world’s only VR metaverse built on blockchain”. It operates a social VR platform of the same name, available on SteamVR, in which users can buy virtual land. In 2019 the company raised $1 million to expand its platform. The headset itself was revealed at Somnium’s own ‘Connect’ event (no, not that Connect) in Prague earlier this week. The company says its device is powered by Qualcomm’s XR2 platform with 6DOF inside-out tracking via four cameras and sports 2,800 x 2,800 displays with a horizontal field of view greater than 115 degrees. VRgineers — known for its professional-grade