Thursday, January 25, 2024

Rat it: Plague Hunter

Rat it: Plague Hunter is an early access VR first person shooter game in which you, an alchemist explore a dark pirate ship and try to eradicate all plague bearer rats with a magical slingshot. As you advance into each room there are more and more rats to kill. Many are just running around but the further you get the more rats you need to find or lure. This adds a puzzle element to the game as you need to find objects you can interact with - shoot them with your slingshot. Some interactable objects do not hide rats, they can hide treasures as well, be it potions to recover health, coins, or alchemical projectiles.

The gameplay is mostly this - enter a room and eliminate all the rats in it. There is a time limit before you die to poison and you can check your health on your forearm, but you can also hear it - the more you cough the less life you have (unless you take lots of damage in a single blow). Once you fail you can quickly retry. I found the slingshot mechanic fairly good. It behaves the way you'd expect. The more force you use to pull, the faster the projectile will go and the harder it will be to target. This also deals more damage and if you use maximum force the common rats can be one-shot. You can choose a playstyle based on this mechanic and you can also swap hands mid-game.

Not all rooms are about rat killing though, you can also end up in a room with a puzzle element which pretty much just requires careful study of the surroundings or a room featuring a boss that has a set behavior you need to learn. These rooms are very fun and I wish there were more of them.

Art style of the game is cartoonish and everything fits well together, sometimes too well as you can miss an object hiding rats. The rats are rather cute than something you'd want to shoot at first sight.

One of the things that may be rather negative for many players is the fact that the game uses teleport for movement and you can only move to specific locations. When having the slingshot in your hands, you cannot move which can add some frustration. During boss battles movement is needed though. Since this game is in early access, I believe it can still be addressed and should be from my point of view.

The UI is rather clunky. The most problematic is changing the projectile type while playing - it was the reason I rather did not use them at all, unless the game required it. It could be done in a similar way you choose emotes in VRChat as that is fast (or think Half-Life: Alyx) and can be comfortably done during combat without much thinking or looking at the UI.

Verdict: 3.5/5
Rat it: Plague Hunter is a VR shooter game that makes you use your controllers as a magical slingshot to eliminate rats. The mechanic of the slingshot is fairly good but the gameplay still gets very repetitive, the further you get the more rats you need to eliminate and that is not the kind of a challenge I'd be personally looking for. The puzzle rooms and bosses spice things up but I still craved for more of these to break the rat killing pace. The game is fun and has a good potential if more story and more mini-game rooms are added. Some glitches, bugs (falling down of the map), clipping (and being able to shoot rats through objects) should be fixed as well.

Wednesday, January 3, 2024

Neko Atsume VR

Neko Atsume is a game about collecting cats. The VR version is similar to the mobile version - you need to put some food in the yard in order for a cat to come. You can also place toys with which the cats will play. When they show up you can play with them and take pictures. Cats will give you fish, currency used for buying food/toys. The more rare cat comes the more fish it gives you. With that you can buy more expensive toys or food to lure more rare cats.

Neko Atsume also has a mixed reality mode where you can create a virtual room using your own real life room as a reference. You can add a bed or table etc. Then you will be prompted to add door back to the VR version and a cat door so the kitty can come. After placing food, a cat will come and it will play with you. You can pat it, pick it up or take pictures.

The good about the game is that you can pat the cats, grab them, or simply watch them from afar. The cats will come pretty much instantly. You can also call a kitty to come to you and it will follow you for a while. Unfortunately the kitties walk only on the floor. It would be great if they could jump on the furniture as well.

The bad? The game is buggy and likes to crash. The UI, while copying the mobile game, is not the best for VR. When you have the menu open you can't do anything else in the game - for example you can't be walking around and taking pictures. Grabbing newspaper to get the daily password and entering it is not well implemented. The controls for both controllers and hand tracking is not particularly intuitive and the tutorial doesn't necessarily help that much (you can get stuck in it as well).

I think the worst is the fact that you can't really walk around in VR. There are several spots you can move to but then you have to use your legs if your room allows it. I saw the cats mostly from behind.

The game is cute and wholesome if you like patting digital cats. 20 USD is way too much for a very broken and hardly a finished game. If Hit-Point fixes the game so there is no graphics clipping, no crashes, better performance, working and intuitive UI, some more things to do or features, no redoing of the MR room etc, the game will be an enjoyable experience.