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Signalstar said:

I would buy PSVR2 if I had the space for it. I don't in my current living situation.

The headset is not that big to store ;)

Many, most games can be played sitting. Which is what you end up doing anyway after a while.
Nearly all of the rest can be played standing in one spot.
I have only played one game (The Last Clockwinder) that needed me to move around the room.


VR is here to stay, but still needs to improve a lot, get a lot more user friendly to become main stream.

There are plenty games already that wouldn't work without VR (or very badly) but true, those don't have the big budgets.

As I mentioned above, The Last Clockwinder is one of those that can only work in VR.

It's a puzzle game where you create carbon copies of yourself forming different production lines. (You can actually do it all standing in one spot, but for max efficiency you can move around to do multiple actions with one copy)


Some games get a lot better with VR controls. Like CyubVR, working with 2 hands at the same time is a lot faster!

And being in the world makes it so much easier not to get lost.

It's a lot easier to judge jump distances in 3D platformers

That would work in AR as well. 3rd person games are tons of fun in VR. Moss 1 and 2 are magical!

Another one that would be incredibly difficult without VR is Puzzling Places, I've put well over 200h in this already


The models only keep getting better and always cool to (pretend to) walk through after it's finished




There are so many more things you can do in VR besides point and shoot/slash.


And of course dual wielding and no speed limits


Plus this just doesn't feel the same on TV, nor can you aim through tiny cracks



VR is the best way to experience games. But it's expensive, cumbersome, fiddly and can make people sick. It will continue to get better.