Tuesday, 21 March 2023

Rez Infinite: PSVR2 Review

Rez Infinite: PSVR2 Review

Developed by Enhance Games
Released by Sony
Platform: PSVR2

A musical shooter may sound like an unusual combo, but Rez Infinite's thrilling port to the PSVR2 makes for a truly enjoyable and immersive experience - if you're willing to cut yourself off from the outside world.

Rez Infinite: PSVR2 Review

With vector and polygonal art, Rez Infinite has a distinct look which makes it stand out from a world of usual other shooters and rhythm based games. You're a hacker that appears to be inside an AI machine and trying to close it down as the AI begins to fight back.

Using directional weaponry and scooting through levels, it's up to you to try and stop the machine - but Rez Infinite is about more than that - especially in its VR iteration. Much of what takes place is really about feeling the game, and sensing the experience (as insane as that sounds) but as you build up in the levels, the game's rhythms become addictive and the playability of the title really kicks in.

Rez Infinite: PSVR2 Review

With eye-tracking technology the star of this port, Rez Infinite makes much of an argument for showing what a 2001 title can do if properly ported across. Taking the place of the aiming and directional weaponry, the eye tracking is the key here and turns it fully into the immersive experience that it always hinted at before.

A nifty little title that's as playable as it is addictive, Rez Infinite is one of the must-have PSVR2 launch titles.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Very latest post

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim: Movie Review

The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim: Movie Review Vocal cast: Gaia Wise, Brian Cox, Luke Pasqualino, Miranda Otto Director: Kenji...