Zombieland: Headshot Fever's gameplay is reminiscent of light-gun classics, but with a greater degree of depth once you start chaining combos.
The combat is fast and fun, and the strategic elements are light and engaging. While Guardians VR contains tactical components, make no mistake, this is an action game at heart.
The Climb 2 is an excellent purchase if you've never bought or played the original, but for those of us who have, it feels like a cash-grab.
Crashland takes the wave shooter's timeless VR trope and fills it with so much style and substance that it feels almost ready to burst.
Vanishing Grace is full of weird exposition and muddy philosophy, and half-baked ideas that just come off as convoluted nonsense.
Crisis VRigade 2 essentially delivers the experience of being sucked into a 90's action movie based on the premise of being sucked into a 90's arcade game.
Even without performance issues, Bow Man misses the mark in several key areas.
Gorn puts you into the leather sandals of an arena fighter who can wield various blades, hammers, and ranged weapons to dispatch your enemies.
Sitting somewhere between a platformer, a puzzle game, and a shameless Spider-Man clone, Yupitergrad is simple, swinging fun.
Whether you're familiar with Tsuro or not, you will likely find it easy to jump right in, with the simplistic controls and gameplay being quick to grasp.
The whole world of Mare feels both mysterious and macabre; it's borderline creepy at times and beautiful throughout its campaign.
Jurassic World Aftermath is the latest videogame in a number of movie tie-ins. Like the later entries in the film series itself, most have eluded critical success but are pretty popular nonetheless.