I know how hard it is to get past VR sickness. But once you do, it becomes very hard to shake your guts. My first VR sickness was Assetto Corsa. But 10 years later I am very hard to shake out of VR. The game must be messed up, or the controls must be non-intuitive. But now I dogfight in planes and spaceships, drift down mountain roads. climb mountains and jump off of cliffs to escape enemies in the Forest. Just fight through it. New players should start with wave-based games. Make the world come to you. After a while, you can move to teleporting around. Then you go to free movement. Pretty soon you are doing things you could not do in the beginning.
It took me a long time to get used to PSVR2. I used motion sickness medication (over the counter) and that helped, limited my play even if meant 5, 10, 15 minutes of gameplay, sat down rather than standing, and finally got used to it after many weeks. These days I have no issues in GT7 as I drive in VR a lot, but some games I need to re-adapt if I haven't played non-driving games for a while.
I did not throw up and played the Demo like 25 min, but I felt a bit sick and it took an hour to pass. I played many vr2 games, I agree people should be careful with Subside, though it is beautiful ❤
You found your VR Kryptonite. I think we all ending up playing that one game that will make us have to level up our VR legs. Definitely trying playing with a fan in front of you. Also, take breaks often and you will begin to be able to play longer until your VR legs have be reforged..lol
It was so fun and immersive that I played it for an hour just in the training area. I used the stick to turn while moving AND turning my head and everything. No problems🤷🏼♂️ I never really have issues w/ sickness tho. If you don't have motion sensitivity, it's a must-buy, imo.
For motion sickness a tip is to lower the brightness level and maybe set performance setting to - Game default - so the PS5 doesn't force anything weird behaviour that's not intended for the game. And for the game maybe try the swim function on or off ?
Damn I'm sorry you had so much problem with the motion sickness. I'm honestly surprised considering your a veteran. I've been playing VR for a long time myself and have only experienced motion sickness one time and that was playing aircar standing up on pcvr. Sucks because I did enjoy the demo and while I agree there's not much of a game there it's still great for what it is
@@chrislair6832 Ikr! It's crazy! Even 24h later and I still feel like crap lol I've also seen a few people on social media having the same issue. It seems like the developer needs to work something out.
Hi mate. I wonder if we had similar experience with call of the mountain, if you played it? Psvr2 is still giving me some motion sickness but it’s getting better. However, in call of the mountain, the super slow turn speed gives me bad motion sick and incredible eye strain. I turn on snap turning and so much better. I don’t know if the slow turn speed did it but my god, it’s a horrible feeling. Like I managed to go through resident evil village as my first game on psvr2 and couldn’t wait to jump back in, Call of the mountain just did me in. Snap turning and lower brightness helped me loads and I really ended up liking the game lots.
@@janchan2258 I just wrote a post explaining why I haven't been able to publish my Alien Rogue Incursion review yet, but hopefully, it will be ready by the end of the week.
I know how hard it is to get past VR sickness. But once you do, it becomes very hard to shake your guts. My first VR sickness was Assetto Corsa. But 10 years later I am very hard to shake out of VR. The game must be messed up, or the controls must be non-intuitive. But now I dogfight in planes and spaceships, drift down mountain roads. climb mountains and jump off of cliffs to escape enemies in the Forest. Just fight through it. New players should start with wave-based games. Make the world come to you. After a while, you can move to teleporting around. Then you go to free movement. Pretty soon you are doing things you could not do in the beginning.
@@gopherchucksgamingnstuff2263 Comment pinned!
I felt motion sickness coming on during the demo and quit right away.
Seems like you've experienced the bends but in VR that's pretty crazy.
When VR becomes dangerously real lol
Someone mentioned swim turning in options, maybe check that mate,
@@sadukar_7th_legion Thanks for the tip!
Yeah turning off the swim turn option made all the difference for me.
It took me a long time to get used to PSVR2. I used motion sickness medication (over the counter) and that helped, limited my play even if meant 5, 10, 15 minutes of gameplay, sat down rather than standing, and finally got used to it after many weeks. These days I have no issues in GT7 as I drive in VR a lot, but some games I need to re-adapt if I haven't played non-driving games for a while.
I did not throw up and played the Demo like 25 min, but I felt a bit sick and it took an hour to pass. I played many vr2 games, I agree people should be careful with Subside, though it is beautiful ❤
You found your VR Kryptonite. I think we all ending up playing that one game that will make us have to level up our VR legs. Definitely trying playing with a fan in front of you. Also, take breaks often and you will begin to be able to play longer until your VR legs have be reforged..lol
It was so fun and immersive that I played it for an hour just in the training area. I used the stick to turn while moving AND turning my head and everything. No problems🤷🏼♂️ I never really have issues w/ sickness tho.
If you don't have motion sensitivity, it's a must-buy, imo.
Me. *puts down the headset and jumps out of a plane*
For motion sickness a tip is to lower the brightness level and maybe set performance setting to - Game default - so the PS5 doesn't force anything weird behaviour that's not intended for the game. And for the game maybe try the swim function on or off ?
@@AmigaVR Thanks for the tips! I'll keep that in mind for next time I play Subside, if that ever happens lol
Damn I'm sorry you had so much problem with the motion sickness. I'm honestly surprised considering your a veteran. I've been playing VR for a long time myself and have only experienced motion sickness one time and that was playing aircar standing up on pcvr. Sucks because I did enjoy the demo and while I agree there's not much of a game there it's still great for what it is
@@chrislair6832 Ikr! It's crazy! Even 24h later and I still feel like crap lol I've also seen a few people on social media having the same issue. It seems like the developer needs to work something out.
@nothingbutgaming1996 damn i hope that doesn't mess up games that previously didn't effect you.
I played the demo with no problems. 🤷♂️
@@Lainer130 I'm jealous lol Just kidding, enjoy mate!
It's a game i played in one hour, and I'm kinda being i want play more
Infact i felt a bit strange... maybe i could had motion sickness if i was new to vr
I haven't had time to try the demo yet. I can't wait to try it.
Thanks for the tip. I’m still trying to get my VR legs and thought this looked good, but will give it a swerve for now.
Never have gotten motion sickness in vr i hope this wont be the first I'll check out the demo thanks
Hi mate.
I wonder if we had similar experience with call of the mountain, if you played it?
Psvr2 is still giving me some motion sickness but it’s getting better.
However, in call of the mountain, the super slow turn speed gives me bad motion sick and incredible eye strain.
I turn on snap turning and so much better.
I don’t know if the slow turn speed did it but my god, it’s a horrible feeling.
Like I managed to go through resident evil village as my first game on psvr2 and couldn’t wait to jump back in,
Call of the mountain just did me in.
Snap turning and lower brightness helped me loads and I really ended up liking the game lots.
When will you release alien vr review
@@janchan2258 I just wrote a post explaining why I haven't been able to publish my Alien Rogue Incursion review yet, but hopefully, it will be ready by the end of the week.