
If you follow the news, you know that it hasn’t been a great year for VR gaming. That’s a bit of an understatement: it has been dire. Meta shut down four of its internal VR studios, including Twisted Pixel (Marvel’s Deadpool VR) and Sanzaru Games (Asgard’s Wrath 2). Ubisoft shut down game development at Red Storm Entertainment, the team behind Assassin’s Creed Nexus VR. Moss developer Polyarc laid off two-thirds of its staff. At a glance, all signs point to the impending death of VR as a gaming platform.
And yet, VR is having an unlikely moment right now. In the last month, we’ve seen the launch of three major game releases: Little Nightmares VR Altered Echoes, The Boys: Trigger Warning, and Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Empire City. All three IP-driven projects are high-profile efforts from studios that remain committed to taking VR seriously. That’s on top of a stream of regular releases that are pushing the tech forward, from Star Trek: Infection to the Apple Vision Pro showpiece Retrocade.
That’s a bit of good news for VR’s loyal player base, and it’s also a small relief for Valve. The company still plans to release the Steam Frame, its next headset, this year. (It has been delayed due to the current RAM crisis along with the Steam Machine.) That’s a bold gamble, at a time when so many major studios that helped build the space are either closing or downsizing. The Steam Frame’s success is entirely dependent on great games, and this month has proven that there’s still life left in the space.
If you plan to pick up a Steam Frame eventually, you’ll have quite the backlog to work through, at the very least. Here’s what I’ve been playing on my headset over the past couple of weeks. If any of them sound interesting, make a mental note to check them out whenever Valve can get its headset out the door. (At least you can finally get a Steam Controller to use with it.)


