VR Fitness: Sweat Without the Monthly Fee | Best Apps Review
Finally, you can burn calories without burning a hole in your wallet every month. These one-and-done VR titles prove that getting ripped shouldn’t require a recurring billing cycle.
The definitive guide to VR gaming — top games for Meta Quest, PlayStation VR2, and PC VR.
Reviews, upcoming releases, and everything you need to get the most out of virtual reality.
Finally, you can burn calories without burning a hole in your wallet every month. These one-and-done VR titles prove that getting ripped shouldn’t require a recurring billing cycle.
Squingle Arcade is basically what happens when a lava lamp and a Rubik’s cube have a very attractive baby in your living room. It’s high-comfort, high-weirdness, and definitely worth the brain-scrambling playtest.
Your VR clips no longer look like they were filmed on a potato inside a toaster. It’s a massive win for your social feed, even if your actual gameplay skills remain highly questionable.
Finally, a VR game that justifies your weirdest childhood hobbies without the social stigma. It’s a low-nausea, high-hilarity riot that proves your hands are better off as puppets than controllers.
Space Control offers a unique, albeit frustratingly realistic, simulation of labor in the cosmos. It is a challenging VR experience that proves working in zero-G is harder than any 9-to-5.
FlatOut 4’s VR debut is taking a detour to May, giving you extra time to prep your inner ear for the chaos. It’s high-octane carnage that promises to be worth the wait—provided you don’t mind a little digital whiplash.
Apple tries to digitize the Big Apple, but can 8K video replace the smell of a dirty subway car? It’s a visual masterpiece that’ll make your PSVR2 feel like a calculator, even if the ‘spirit’ is still buffering.
BlackGate adds a new alien to its 4v1 sci-fi roster, proving that screaming in space is better with friends. It’s a high-intensity workout for your heart rate and your headset’s face gasket.
It’s neon, it’s pop, and it’s a legitimate threat to your living room furniture. If you want to dance like a disco god while burning 400 calories, this is your sign.
Strap in, because Microsoft Flight Simulator is finally bringing its cockpit chaos to PS VR2. It’s a breathtaking technical marvel, provided your stomach can handle the G-forces without turning your living room into a crime scene.