The Titanic VR expertise, beforehand solely on PC VR and PlayStation VR, is coming to Quest 3 and Quest 3S subsequent month.
Titanic VR initially launched on Steam, the Oculus Rift Retailer, and on the unique PlayStation VR in 2018, leveraging the facility of your gaming PC or PS4 to allow you to expertise and perceive historical past by reliving the tragic sinking of RMS Titanic in 1912 as a survivor, and exploring the shipwreck in a submarine within the current day.
The developer Have interaction XR, previously Immersive VR Training, is identical behind the Apollo 11 VR expertise, which first launched on early PC VR in 2015.
However whereas Have interaction felt Apollo 11 was appropriate for the unique Oculus Quest, and delivered it as a launch title, the developer did not really feel that standalone chipsets had been as much as the duty of rendering the Titanic expertise, with its a whole bunch of NPCs and detailed exterior and inside recreation of the large ship – till now.
The primary footage of Titanic VR working standalone on Quest 3.
Have interaction says it is “pushing the boundaries” of the XR2 Gen 2 chipset in Quest 3 and Quest 3S to carry the complete Titanic VR expertise to standalone VR. The developer has shared the primary footage of the submarine expertise working standalone on Quest 3, and you’ll see it above.
Titanic VR launches on the Meta Horizon Retailer for Quest 3 and Quest 3S on April 14, and you’ll wishlist it now. The value hasn’t but been revealed, however the PC VR model is $20, for reference.
Yow will discover our assessment of the PC VR model of Titanic VR right here, however needless to say the graphics and efficiency will probably be completely different between it and the approaching Quest 3 port.
Titanic VR Evaluation: A Promising Begin For VR Edutainment
If you say the phrase Titanic you may’t assist however assume Celine Dion, drawings of French ladies and steamy home windows. That’s a bit flawed, isn’t it? 1,503 folks died when the ‘unsinkable’ vessel hit the ocean mattress in 1912, practically three-quarters of all passengers aboard, and