Move freely around the battlefield to outflank, outsmart, and outgun an escalating threat with your arsenal of deadly, fully interactive weapons. Experience innovative VR gunplay that ingeniously blends improvised run and gun combat with a 1:1 grabbable cover system. Grab your gun, cock it, and take aim as a maverick war hero thrown back into the fight. Playable on Valve Index, HTC Vive, Meta Rift S, and Meta Quest and Quest 2 via Oculus Link. Uncompromised, audacious, and unashamedly stylish, Fracked grabs your VR headset by the motion controllers and delivers an ass kicking game that has been made from the ground up for virtual reality platforms. The ragdolls and physics here really shine as every enemy vehicle explodes into beautiful fireballs, catapulting their passengers skyward, as they somersault off of a thousand-foot high cliff.The award-winning action adventure, now on PC VR!įrom the creators of the ground-breaking Phantom: Covert Ops, Fracked seamlessly collides relentless “run and cover” gunfights with free and fluid skiing and climbing, in trailblazing fashion. Littered throughout the campaign are sections of you hitting some fresh powder and blasting skimobiles into fiery wrecks along the way. When you’re not blasting crystal zombies you’ll be hitting the slopes for some pretty awesome ski chases. Burning the natural gas recovered from fracking, for instance, produces half the amount of carbon dioxide of oil and gasoline. There’s plenty of evidence to suggest that hydraulic fracking is safe and actually low-impact on the environment. Thankfully it doesn’t browbeat you too much over the environment and Fracked, referring to hydraulic fracking, is just used as a clever name for the game rather than some commentary on the practice. I will say it could have used an extra main weapon or two but you can pick up limited use weapons like revolvers, shotguns, and grenade launchers.įracked’s story is your standard “save the world” type plot with a bit of an ecological spin to it. Though nothing revolutionary, Fracked’s gunplay is smooth, tight, and enjoyable throughout. You can also grab pieces of cover to pull yourself out of harm’s way to recover health or pop in a fresh mag. This oddly enough never feels repetitive as the environments vary to make each gunfight feel fresh and challenging. There are some heavy-type enemies but you’ll mainly be facing off against waves of grunts. This is thanks to the finely tuned haptics, which goes to show the PSVR move wands have at least that advantage over other VR controllers. Though you’ll only get two main weapons for the whole campaign, a pistol and SMG, spraying down enemies with fully automatic gunfire feels amazing. Same goes for the gunplay with its streamlined reloading and superb haptics. ![]() You won’t play Fracked and ever think, “gee, this could look better”. Other PSVR games suffer from massive screen door effect, especially with draw distances, but Fracked with its Borderlands -esque cell-shading gives the game a surprising amount of visual pop. ![]() It’s worth saying too how good the game looks, even on a headset that came out several years ago. The environments throughout Fracked shine as the developers rarely reuse assets, giving each section of the game an attention to detail that goes a long way. The game starts off nicely with a ski chase against an avalanche and then right into some gunplay. You play as a nameless employee of the Finchteq Corporation which has a mining operation in what I’m assuming is Alaska.
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