The next book
Moss is a VR “third-person” platformer set in a story book where you help a little mouse on a big adventure. All six VR players liked it so much that there’s a sequel! Moss: Book II picks up right after the events of the first game, after you helped Quill kill the big bad snake.
The game starts with me opening the literal next book in the story and being transported into it.
It’s on the mouse
Quill, the mouse, works with the usual third-person platforming controls. Like every game that calls itself action-adventure, there’s the usual mix of combat, puzzles, and exploration.
However, the special feature of the Moss series is that you can directly interact with the level to help her, with the level shown at about the height of your chest. You can pull and push objects to help Quill get around or even grab enemies to hold them still for her to hit. The combat is very forgiving, with enemies slowly telegraphing their attacks, plus you can heal Quill any time by holding her in your hand.
As expected from a book, Moss: Book II is a linear adventure. I sometimes get pulled out of the book world back to my seat to watch the next pages of the story unfold.
A VR game that doesn’t try to throw you around
Even as an experienced VR user, it gets annoying when a VR game feels the need to have very large spaces or to fling you halfway to Mars to try to sell the immersive power of virtual reality. In contrast, Moss sells the immersiveness of VR modestly but also more intimately. The environments are smaller but very detailed, like a stage right in front of you on a desk.
Unlike a lot of VR games, in Moss, sitting is actually required. Sometimes, you need to lean and look around, but the game never asks you to get up and move around. Keeping with the book theme, instead of scrolling the view as Quill moves around, scene changes are represented as turning a page of the book.
Since everything happens right in front of you, at about chest- to eye-level, and you never need to turn around, Moss is a much more comfortable and less intense experience.
Friend-shaped
Virtual reality is a very intimate format for a game. Eye contact and physical gestures feel so much more compelling in VR than in any other format. VR games inevitably integrate the players themselves into the game setting, so the fourth wall is always at least a bit loose in VR.
In Moss, there is no fourth wall. Quill knows you’re reading her book and often turns to look up at you to ask for help.
And you can pet her!
And you can high five her!
Where we’ve been
At this point, I’ve explored swamps and castles on a quest to get the important things that do the important stuff. I’ve just made it past a big twist in the story, which I deliberately left out of the pictures and videos in this article.
But here’s a picture of a beautiful swamp.
I’d probably play this if it had a regular tracking camera.
Can you play this game sitting down, I have a quest 3 but my new apartment bedroom is tiny and crowded so I can’t really play any games that require movement, so now I just use to watch videos sadly
Sitting is required. Sometimes you need to lean to look around. Scenes are only shown in the 180° in front of you, so you never need to spin around.
I think it works best sitting down. The scenes are generally a fixed perspective, but you do at least want to give your head a bit of room to look around because sometimes there’s small details hiding behind parts of the environment you can peek around, and honestly it’s just a beautiful game to take in.
I had no idea Moss 2 was out, and it came out in 2022. Instant purchase for sure, but now I have to decide if I’m going to replay the first one. Thanks for the PSA.
This is so beautiful it made me want to have a VR set
What VR headset do you use?
Index
I really liked the first game, but haven’t set up my base stations since moving. I’ve still got the OG Vive, and I’m kinda waiting to see whatever Valve’s got up their sleeve next instead of putting together my old system.
Unfortunately, the VR space is so slow that I don’t think it’ll be hard to catch up on the masterpieces even if I wait.
Unless you start using Vorpx, then you get a lot of masterpieces to play in VR. As much as I lived Alyx and other real VR games, I have a hard time putting it down with racing games like Burnout Paradise and Carx (with VR and wheel), or Prey which actually feels like it was made for VR.
I truly don’t recall playing a real VR game in the last 2 years.
Check out the Flat2VR discord as well if you haven’t already: https://discord.gg/flat2vr
Oh don’t worry: I VR!
Say what? Prey has a VR mode? I did not see anything about that on the Steam page
No no, but with Vorpx all it’s missing is the VR hands, but given the pace and design of the game, it’s still extremely immersive and end up being a better VR game than most actual VR games.