

Tales from the Galaxy’s Edge: Review in a nutshell.In April 2023, I reviewed the PSVR 2 version of the game: The technically much improved Enhanced Edition takes the Star Wars adventure to a new level and is by far the best version of Star Wars: Tales from the Galaxy's Edge. With Last Call, TGE clearly surpassed he cinematic Vader experience, at least in terms of scope and gameplay. Vader Immortal was considered the best VR experience in the Star Wars universe, along with Star Wars: Squadrons. You can find my much more positive overall verdict on the complete VR game under my conclusion. This time on Meta Quest 2 and with Last Call included. The following review gives my rather mixed impressions of the base game of 2020, which I reviewed on the now outdated Oculus Quest. The base game was expanded in the fall of 2021 with the extensive paid DLC Last Call, which brought two new mini-campaigns as well as two playable tales and more than doubled the game time. When it was released, TGE consisted of a mini-campaign and a playable tale, which together offered around three to four hours of gameplay. It was developed by Lucasfilm's immersive entertainment studio ILMxLAB.

The original Star Wars: Tales from the Galaxy's Edge (which I will abbreviate as "TGE" to make things easier to read) was released in late 2020 for Oculus Quest 1 and is the second major Star Wars VR adventure after Vader Immortal. The so-called Enhanced Edition is the ultimate version of the game. The goal is to get out, with a variety of ways available to do so.Tales from the Galaxy's Edge is now available for Playstation VR 2. You're locked in a creepy house, where there are dead crows in the microwave, burnt dolls in the hallway, and all manner of other creepy, evil things on show. We were reluctant to give it a go, to be honest! Anyone who's seen the trailer will know the dark style and jump-out moments. Resident Evil 7 is pant-wettingly scary stuff. It's got great style and floaty movement that works a treat for a virtual reality experience - we didn't feel queasy like we have in some VR games before now. You command a tank, using your head's position to target, and the DualShock 4 controller to fire and manoeuvre around the various arena types. We think Battlezone works a treat as an arcade-style game to casually dip into and play, although there's plenty of progression and great depth too. Battlezone is based on the classic Atari arcade game from the 80s but ramps up the action considerably.
