Doctor Who: The Edge Of Reality reimagines last year’s VR experience with brand-new gameplay, new monsters and new worlds to explore. Wield the sonic screwdriver on a quest to save the universe, guided by the Thirteenth Doctor, voiced by Jodie Whittaker, who is this time joined by the Tenth Doctor, voiced by David Tennant.
Released on
Genres
Reviews View More
What started as a fun game that gave me Portal vibes almost immediately turned into an irritating mess cobbled together for non-VR systems.
This game does not give you any pointers or tell you what to do so you spend most of it walking around trying to see if anything sticks out (and they usually don't).
I gave up on this once I was let at the TARDIS controls because I wasn't told what to do in order to use them and I spent like ten minutes pushing buttons just to get told "Try again!"
What am I doing?
Why am I failing?
No idea.
This game does not give you any pointers or tell you what to do so you spend most of it walking around trying to see if anything sticks out (and they usually don't).
I gave up on this once I was let at the TARDIS controls because I wasn't told what to do in order to use them and I spent like ten minutes pushing buttons just to get told "Try again!"
What am I doing?
Why am I failing?
No idea.
Tethered Arial Release Developed in Style.
This game is objectively pretty bad. The visuals are primitive, the mechanics are glitchy, it's very short, and the gameplay isn't all that varied. But as a big Doctor Who fan, I tend to eat up anything that the BBC churn out. The novelty of navigating the Weeping Angels, and wielding the Sonic Screwdriver were fun for the duration of the thing.
This game is objectively pretty bad. The visuals are primitive, the mechanics are glitchy, it's very short, and the gameplay isn't all that varied. But as a big Doctor Who fan, I tend to eat up anything that the BBC churn out. The novelty of navigating the Weeping Angels, and wielding the Sonic Screwdriver were fun for the duration of the thing.