
Rob Pitt writes: I heard about Apex Construct a few weeks ago and instantly became interested when I found out that ex-DICE employees are behind it as I love my PSVR but other than a few amazing titles (a few on the way this week) the majority of the games have been either stationary puzzle games or horror games so far. I loved Raw Data last year and it quickly became one of my favourite PSVR titles of 2017, Apex Construct seems to remind me a lot of it in terms of its combat and setting, yet it brings with it an engaging story and memorable, diverse locations. The developers themselves recommend you play this game on a PS4 Pro, which I have done; however, I have looked around and the experience on a standard PS4 isn’t that bad, the image just may not be at the same resolution/graphical level. Also, the amount I’ve played so far is before the day-one patch so I’ll update the review if the patch brings anything significant. That being said – let’s find out why I’m talking so highly of the game.
Sports games have struggled to translate to VR, but there are plenty of good ones out there. Here's our picks for the best VR sports games.
Good list but Thrill of the Fight 2 and Racket Club should be in this. TOFT 2 is one hell of a work out and even found myself watching boxing instructional videos in order to improve. Racket Club does an amazing job adapting tennis, badminton and pickleball into something that feels realistic but fits in with smaller VR spaces.

The original PSVR has a great catalogue of games, but keeping the set-up working well can be a pain.
Join us as we take you through the basic gameplay of Humanity, an action-puzzle game where you control a glowing Shiba Inu. You place commands on the ground for a giant marching horde of people to follow. Make them turn, jump, float through the air, swim, climb, etc., all to reach the goal (or goals) in each stage.
Congrats Fast Travel Games. This game rules.