Flappy Experience Is A Flappy Bird Clone For Apple Vision Pro

Flappy Experience is a clone of Flappy Bird with first-person gameplay, and it’s free on Apple Vision Pro.Developed by Tal Kol using RealityKit, Flappy Experience takes direct inspiration from 2013’s casual mobile side-scroller, Flappy Bird. All you do is move your arms up and down like a bird flapping its wings while aiming to avoid green pipes, and this experience features four levels of difficulty. As part of this release, Tal Kol also released the full source code on Github.Here’s how it looks in action:unofficial but controversial reboot. After being delisted in 2014, a new version built on a blockchain platform recently emerged after the trademark was abandoned and acquired by Gametech. It’s faced significant criticism for introducing cryptocurrency and not involving the original developer, Doug Nguyen.Flappy Experience is free to download on Apple Vision Pro.

Another Peak at VR-Enabled Cars, This Time From Holoride and Porsche

We’ve been keeping our eyes on holoride for a while now. The company promises VR-enabled in-vehicle entertainment and productivity applications – and they’ve delivered. However, those experiences have been demos and attractions at events, not something that an individual could actually use in their personal vehicle. holoride recently announced their first commercial installment with Porsche, featuring Cosmic Chase, holoride’s first original title, developed by Schell Games. While this is still a location-based experience currently only available at LA’s Porsche Experience Center, it does give us an exciting look at one of the experiences coming to consumer vehicles as early as this year. What Is the Experience? Schell Games is the studio behind well-known VR titles including Until You Fall, Among Us VR, and the I Expect You to Die series. If some of this is ringing a bell, Schell Games was one of the leaders in a $12M funding round

A Hands-On Review of Holoride

Some of my favorite memories with my children involve traveling around the United States to visit national parks, historic sites, and science museums. We had an old 15-passenger van that I had purchased for $750 from a non-profit agency and with several rows of seats, each of my kids had plenty of space to spread their toys and art supplies while we traveled. They also had a Leapster, a small educational handheld gaming console that kept them occupied and reinforced basic academic skills for the younger children in particular, but we never had any other gaming consoles until many years later when my oldest son purchased an Xbox for his younger brothers with his first paycheck as a paratrooper for the US Army. Our travels took place many years ago and now our lives are quite different. Just a couple of weeks before the pandemic my van finally died, the