In the Nvidia pannel, I chose Subnautica and I set the setting to "always starts with Nvidia graphic card", the laptop PC power settings are set to "performance" and not economy. I also tried launching with "run as admin", to uninstall and install the game twice, to make sure the game launch with the Nvidia graphic card and not the HD Graphics or something. I tried to save and to load the game in VR but same result. When I launch the game on PC in non-VR mode, it works. My configuration is not a war machine but I can play Skyrim and The Forest in VR without any troubles. I recently cleaned my graphic card drivers and installed the lastest version, the version of Windows Update is the last too. I believe the Oculus Touch are not fully compatible with this game but I'm not sure this is the issue. I have to say I saw some topics including the topic "VR Troubleshooting" before but it didn't help me. In fact, the black screen is in the Oculus Rift and my PC shows the loading picture (I think, this is a ship crashing). I didn't find that exact problem anywhere. As I said in the title, there is a black screen when I launch the game, after the "New game" menu selected. The Forest's VR support is one of the few VR supports of originally non-VR games that is actually really good implemented.I have an annoying issue with this game (which seems fantastic by the way). Do you guys know of any other immersive game you can recommend for VR? I really like the open world survival crafting sandbox genre. So I actually bought my VR headset for this game, which makes it quite a disappointment. It would have been a fluid VR gameplay and comfortable enough to play like that for hours. Moving the mouse as usuall, but even when the mouse is pointing in one direction, I can always take a look at the side without moving the mouse. I had hope that either it would work with th touch controllers, or with keyboard/mouse as when playing without VR, but with the extra freedom of movement with the head. When playing with keyboard/mouse (which I wanted) I had to always stare at the thing I wanted to pick up, which almost gave me whiplash trying to catch fishes or breaking rocks. I have an HTC Vive Cosmos and it looks wonderful, but it plays bad. Originally posted by Nick:It sounds alot like my experience with it. (there are exceptions as well, like for example Fallout VR and Skyrim VR, which can be fun, but are just lazy ports of the original ones for what Bethesda charges additional 60 bucks each) The gameplay is built and thought of for VR. "VR-only" means the game is usually created from the ground up for VR. (there are exceptions like No Man's Sky but I find even these to not come near VR-only games) "Supports VR" means it has pretty surely just a basic implementation and the VR gameplay is just normal gameplay with the display attached to your head. Honestly, there is no better advice for VR newbies than: If you look for VR games, look for "VR only" games, not for "supports VR". You can use your VR Motion Controllers (at least Oculus Touch but very likely also Vive's Controllers) but they aren't tracked meaning it just simulates an normal XBox controller. Nope, Subnautica's VR implementation is reaaaallly basic.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |