
But on PlayStation VR, an interesting trend is emerging: the major console game “VR mission.” The VR mission is a free chapter added to a big game with a devoted fanbase, like Rise of the Tomb Raider, Final Fantasy XV, or Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare.

Star Wars Battlefront 2 will be released on November 17 for PC, PS4, and Xbox One.Making virtual reality games is hard. It could allow the teams to focus on making the already announced content better, without any VR-shaped distractions. If the three development teams cannot find the time or resources to develop a VR mission or demo at launch, in addition to the story and multiplayer improvements, then it might not be such a bad thing. The new game is significantly larger than its predecessor and includes a single-player campaign something which previous Battlefront didn't have. And while the headset isn't totally without major third-party support, the more major releases that include VR content and can help show off the technology, the better.īut on a positive note, Star Wars Battlefront 2 could benefit from the lack of VR. This year, the PlayStation VR will benefit from other tie-in VR games such as Final Fantasy XV: Monster of the Deep. That announcement may also be disappointing for Sony who may have hoped that Battlefront 2's VR support could help it shift even more PS VR units.

That mission was praised by most critics who said that it could have a major impact on sales of the Sony headset. Star Wars Battlefront received a Rogue One VR DLC mission that put players in the pilot's seat of an X-Wing. "There is no VR," states the developer, who explained that "it's taken enough effort to make that." Webster also said that "we could sit down and spend a good number of hours talking about where VR needs to get to in order to work with that, because in something like you’re doing the job of a fighter pilot." However, "in the real world that has a significant physiological effect on you, which would dramatically limit the audience."įor those who were holding out hope for Battlefront 2 VR content, Webster's latest comments will be disappointing, especially as its predecessor including VR support. In a new interview, Webster now explains that Star Wars Battlefront 2will not support VR after all. Earlier this year, Criterion general manager Matt Webster hinted that Star Wars Battlefront 2 may have VR support and then a PlayStation email newsletter that claimed that the game would be compatible the PlayStation VR headset.īut although these hints were more than enough to get fans going giddy over the possibility of VR content, Criterion has now come out and denied these reports. Rumors have been circling about Star Wars Battlefront 2's virtual reality support for quite some time.
