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Asgard’s Wrath is just one of the many games of 2019 that have heralded a new, welcome change in virtual reality gaming. Photo: Sanzaru Games, Oculus Studios

From Star Wars to Stardust Odyssey, the 10 best VR games of 2019 for PC and PlayStation

  • Fans of RPGs found virtual-reality perfection in Asgard’s Wrath, from music to gameplay, as the medium’s promise was finally realised
  • Jump scares were especially prominent in the mini games in Five Nights at Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted
Video gaming

For a medium that was supposed to be forged in artfulness and creativity, virtual reality’s last few years have been good enough but not astounding. It’s this past year, however, that the medium’s promise is finally being met.

The numbers bear this out. Nielsen SuperData noted that sales of VR hardware will be up 31 per cent in 2019, from 1.6 billion last year to 2.1 billion this year.

The newest Oculus hardware is generally a joy; Oculus Quest is even about to eschew using the controller on some games. Sony’s PlayStation VR continues to win big when it sticks to its studios’ love and appreciation for narrative.

Beyond the big players, if extraordinary experiences like War Remains , The Collider and Unceded Territories were more game-oriented, they definitely would have made this list.

Asgard’s Wrath

Sanzaru Games, Oculus Studios | Platform: PC VR

The first feeling when playing this game? It’s the childlike amazement that comes with the promise of VR fulfilled. Look up at the milky, starry skies and see a mystical aurora as you walk through a wintry forest. That’s just the cherry on top of a game that feels like the very idea of magic realised.

Even the sound design is perfection – from the crunch of boots on the snow to the band playing in a roadhouse. Combine that with the brutality of battle and gameplay as taut as that in God of War, Asgard’s Wrath is an essential RPG opera of godliness.

Art from the remastered version of L.A. Noire. Photo: Rockstar

L.A. Noire: The VR Case Files

Rockstar Games | PC VR, PS VR

With its fedoras, tough talk and Dashiell Hammett-inspired interrogations of potential criminals, L.A. Noire is arguably one of the best games of the decade. For the VR version, the open world is transformed to include seven in-your-face cases, so you’ll really feel the essence of its 1940s Tinseltown.

If your powers of observation were key to questioning witnesses and crooks in the original, it’s even more useful observing the give and take between the cops and the creeps in the VR version.

A scene from the VR game No Man's Sky Beyond. Photo: Hello Games

No Man’s Sky Beyond

Hello Games | PC VR, PS VR

Because of the ever-changing nature of the far-flung planets and their unique denizens in No Man’s Sky Beyond, I can’t think of a game more suited to the wonders of VR.

I even enjoyed the physical nature of mining, which I usually hate to do in any sort of game. When I’ve had enough of exploring and making note of the odd monsters and creatures, my ship is its own delight: zipping through space to another mystery planet is a thrill ride.

VR game Stormland. Photo: Insomniac Games

Stormland

Insomniac Games | PC VR

Now that Stormland has been polished and released, the brilliance of its luxuriant world and sci-fi narrative is evident. As you move so, so smoothly through islands high in the sky, you can switch between shooting and stealth play and discover new weapons to make Vesper, the android you play, superior to those who dare to engage you in battle. It’s a step forward for Oculus VR games, and I didn’t get dizzy as I tread its paths.

A scene from VR game Blood and Truth. Photo: London Studio

Blood and Truth

London Studio | PS VR

Developed by the acclaimed studio that created The Getaway: Black Monday and The London Heist for the launch of this headset, Blood and Truth goes farther in its efforts of immersion.

Where Heist relied on cheeky British humour to get by, Blood and Truth has humour along with the kind of hi-tech action that includes burning planes and missiles whizzing around your head. In other words, you’re in the middle of war and panic.

The detailed visuals, including jumping off a plank high above terra firma – surrounded by a night city panorama – make this shooter full of high drama and vertigo-filled beauty.

A scene from VR game Five Nights at Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted. Photo: Steel Wool Studios

Five Nights at Freddy’s VR: Help Wanted

Steel Wool Studios | PC VR, PS VR

Five Nights has always been about jump scares. The hair-raising panic of creepy animatronic animals sneaking up on you works even better in this collection of VR mini games, especially during one snippet when you’re in a room with security monitors. You see the horror moving toward you and you have to keep it out.

The fever of terror washes over you in two ways. There’s the possibility of impending doom, and there’s the fear of being stuck in that small room. It’s utterly claustrophobic. And that’s just one of 50 small nuggets of eeriness.

The VR game Vader Immortal: A Star Wars VR Series. Photo: ILMxLAB

Vader Immortal: A Star Wars VR Series

ILMxLAB | PC VR

Is it an Oculus experience or is it an Oculus game? It doesn’t matter because it’s so exciting. Meeting an intimidating Darth Vader and battling eight-foot droids with your lightsaber takes you into the world of Star Wars’ dark side like no prior offering has. And ZOE3, your droid, is played by Maya Rudolph, brilliantly voicing scenes written by David S. Goyer (of The Dark Knight and Blade fame).

Yes, the second and third episodes are half the length of the first. But especially because the Skywalker trilogy is ending with the release of The Rise of Skywalker, play it, you must.

A scene from VR game Stardust Odyssey. Photo: Agharta Studio

Stardust Odyssey

Agharta Studio | PS VR

When a studio begins the game development process by researching the Silk Road and Berber (an ethnic group in North Africa) history, and looking into imaginative French comic book artists Mœbius and Jean-Claude Mezières for sci-fi inspiration, that’s a good sign. Especially awesome here is undersea travel in your spaceship. The mix of strategy as you level up your ship, stealth to avoid battle and crazy shooting of the evildoers is well-balanced.

While the narrative is generally uninspired compared to the artwork, this one’s on the list because of the exotic mash-up of ingenious, gilded environments and futuristic riffs on times past.

A scene from VR game Trover Saves the Universe. Photo: Squanch Games

Trover Saves the Universe

Squanch Games | PS VR

What accentuates the characterisations and enhances the whole experience of playing this title is the mature humour that will make you laugh – loudly – despite yourself. Trover, a purple being with face-eyes that pop out of his head, is lovable and funny.

It’s important, too, that Justin Roiland, Rick and Morty’s co-creator, worked on this endeavour. Games in general don’t have enough humour, and humour is probably the hardest genre to pull off. It doesn’t seem difficult for Roiland, who knows games well. That’s the golden key to Trover’s guffaw-filled excellence.

A scene from the VR game Ghost Giant. Photo: Zoink AB

Ghost Giant

Zoink AB | PS VR

This game features a touching, cute and charismatic character you view from above – a forlorn feline named Louis. But if you look at this as a funny animal story, you’re not looking closely. There are broken lives in the story, and you’re there to witness the struggle and try to soothe Louis as a helpful Ghost Giant with mystical, blue, see-through hands.

As you solve puzzles and explore the joyful moments of non-playable beasts in a fairy tale village, you’re emotionally moved again and again during the four hours it takes to play this gem.

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