Welcome aboard the Fantastic Leap, Earth's only crowdfunded, luxury escape craft! As the only human serving alongside a robotic crew, your job is to keep the ship safe using TIME STALL, the ship's time-bending safety protocol.
When disaster strikes, Time Stall temporarily freezes time aboard the ship, allowing you to manipulate objects, divert projectiles and combine various objects…whatever it takes to save the ship and her Captain from destruction!
Manipulate objects in stalled time to save the crew.
Experiment with physics, allowing you to find creative solutions to the catastrophes happening onboard the ship.
Set up crazy situations just to see what happens when time goes back to normal.
| comfort | ⦾ Comfortable |
| age rating | 13+ Teen |
| storage | 1.8 GB |
| website | timestallvr.com |
| developer | Force Field Entertainment B.V. |
| publisher | Oculus Studios |
| connection | Internet not required |
| app version | 1.0 |
| languages |
English ∙ French ∙ German ∙ Japanese ∙ Korean ∙ Spanish
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Playful and AAA. AI robots out of control and you have a chance to intercept the problem before it's too late.
I don't see any way to enable smooth turning instead of snap turning. the game is fun, but snap turning totally breaks immersion.
So please read this review if you want to know what the game really is, I honestly thought that this was going to be like a crew member on a ship doing maintenance. But it's really just protecting the captain from moving objects. It's a fun game don't get me wrong, but it's not actually what it looks like.
I thought this game was cute. The little BOB robots remind me of the minions and the capitan is funny. I enjoyed the side quest challenges and I had to replay some of the episodes multiple times before figuring out the tricks and clever thinking that goes into trying to save 3 in 1. Good clean humor.
This is such a unique puzzle game and each puzzle has a few different ways to solve it, which makes it more fun than most puzzlers. The voice acting is great with a good sense of humor. It’s not terribly long, but it is a great puzzler with unique situations that take advantage of stalling time for a bit.
The game goes by quick, and there isn't much to do within the levels. You are confined to a small space and there is always a ticking clock, so you never really get to explore or experiment. Like the majority of VR games, it feels like a taste of something that could be much more, but will probably never be. And I'm not sure why there are so many VR games about robots. This game seems to feature a lot of played out VR tropes...
If you are new to VR, you will probably enjoy this and want to show it off to other VR newbies. If you have been playing VR for awhile now, it feels rather old, despite the neat premise.