top of page
Search

Snowglobe Download For Pc [PC]





















































About This Game Lost and alone, you awaken in a barren place, an isolated temple before you. Inside, a way out... Inspired by the point and click games of the past, Snowglobe is a virtual reality take on a familiar concept. In this short adventure game, you'll meet interesting individuals, explore a strange world, and collect items to use in inventive ways to find your way out of the rift. Coming soon to VR. 7aa9394dea Title: SnowglobeGenre: Adventure, IndieDeveloper:Friend FactoryPublisher:Friend FactoryRelease Date: 8 Feb, 2018 Snowglobe Download For Pc [PC] snow globe display. snow globe killer. snow globe keychain. snow globe machu picchu. snow globe yard decoration. snow globe bush. snow globe nav remix. snowglobe android apps. snow globe near me. snow globe rig. free snow globe photos. snow globe john lewis. snow globe 16. snowglobe 2007 free full movie. snow globe on plane. snowglobe free online movie. snowglobe festival lineup. snowglobe movie. snow globe game free download. snow globe ideas. snow globe pictures free. 101 dalmatians snow globe. snow globe iphone 6 plus case Snowglobe is a title made by a developer with a lot of promise. If it really was made primarily by one person as it seems, then it's a credit to their talent and resourcefulness. There are occasional interaction issues, and changing some puzzle cues could have smoothed out unnecessary confusion at a few points. Neither of those problems took me out of the world or stopped me wanting to discover what was behind the next door. Keep it up!. Played v1.02 on the Rift (no official support but mostly worked).Summary:- An OK starter VR experience marred by interaction issues and lack of cues- A very short (< 1 hr) experience vaguely similar to M.I.A.Observations:- Now that games suddenly have freely interacting "bodies" instead of decade+ standard controller expectations, devs need to really consider physicality as if they were making actual objects. - I suggest every VR dev go read something like Don Norman's "The Design of Everyday Things"- Spending longer reviewing the game than playing it...Pros:- Decent atmosphere- Puzzles provide a "reason" for basic VR interactions like pickup\/pull, smash\/throw, inventory, and bow- Animal companions having stronger emotional impact in VR than pancake games-- BUT, add some interactions. A human instinctively reaches out to pet or scratch their animals.Cons:- I assume this was intentional but the 2 voice overs are so distorted I could barely make out 10% of what was said.-- "you'll meet interesting individuals" implies way more than a couple of 2 sentence VOX- "In this short adventure game" ... "explore a strange world"-- Another over-promise. 3 small "rooms" is hardly exploring.- movement is too limited-- adding at least of fixed 90 degree rotate would really help. Was constantly craning around and jumping back and forth trying to get the right distance and angle for iteration- I (and from some videos, others), flailed around too much.-- picking up and turning screwdriver and picking the lock--- I somehow opened the chest w\/o undoing the chains but couldn't get the treats and had to look online as to how that was supposed to work.--- Lots of games let you smash or throw a couple items to no real point other than presence. There were a LOT of pots and this felt like that. Had to go online to find that one pot mattered.--- And again to figure out the turning the screwdriver trick. The picking vs just unlocking was too subtle and needing a cue about the type of interaction.-- With both audio and visual distraction, didn't see the blue house\/etc pieces for several minutes. This was a quite arbitrary interaction with no real mechanical\/physical framing for why this puzzle did anything. -- dog doesn't follow which means a long wait when you realize you need him-- VR adventure games provide far more points for attempted interaction than a traditional point and click, and "cost" the player far more effort. Therefor the interactions need to be much smoother and more natural to compensate. In this type of game, I want to think things through with my mind not play Twister.- Some minor annoyances on (unsupported) Rift, see discussion entry.. Snowglobe is a title made by a developer with a lot of promise. If it really was made primarily by one person as it seems, then it's a credit to their talent and resourcefulness. There are occasional interaction issues, and changing some puzzle cues could have smoothed out unnecessary confusion at a few points. Neither of those problems took me out of the world or stopped me wanting to discover what was behind the next door. Keep it up!. Played v1.02 on the Rift (no official support but mostly worked).Summary:- An OK starter VR experience marred by interaction issues and lack of cues- A very short (< 1 hr) experience vaguely similar to M.I.A.Observations:- Now that games suddenly have freely interacting "bodies" instead of decade+ standard controller expectations, devs need to really consider physicality as if they were making actual objects. - I suggest every VR dev go read something like Don Norman's "The Design of Everyday Things"- Spending longer reviewing the game than playing it...Pros:- Decent atmosphere- Puzzles provide a "reason" for basic VR interactions like pickup\/pull, smash\/throw, inventory, and bow- Animal companions having stronger emotional impact in VR than pancake games-- BUT, add some interactions. A human instinctively reaches out to pet or scratch their animals.Cons:- I assume this was intentional but the 2 voice overs are so distorted I could barely make out 10% of what was said.-- "you'll meet interesting individuals" implies way more than a couple of 2 sentence VOX- "In this short adventure game" ... "explore a strange world"-- Another over-promise. 3 small "rooms" is hardly exploring.- movement is too limited-- adding at least of fixed 90 degree rotate would really help. Was constantly craning around and jumping back and forth trying to get the right distance and angle for iteration- I (and from some videos, others), flailed around too much.-- picking up and turning screwdriver and picking the lock--- I somehow opened the chest w\/o undoing the chains but couldn't get the treats and had to look online as to how that was supposed to work.--- Lots of games let you smash or throw a couple items to no real point other than presence. There were a LOT of pots and this felt like that. Had to go online to find that one pot mattered.--- And again to figure out the turning the screwdriver trick. The picking vs just unlocking was too subtle and needing a cue about the type of interaction.-- With both audio and visual distraction, didn't see the blue house\/etc pieces for several minutes. This was a quite arbitrary interaction with no real mechanical\/physical framing for why this puzzle did anything. -- dog doesn't follow which means a long wait when you realize you need him-- VR adventure games provide far more points for attempted interaction than a traditional point and click, and "cost" the player far more effort. Therefor the interactions need to be much smoother and more natural to compensate. In this type of game, I want to think things through with my mind not play Twister.- Some minor annoyances on (unsupported) Rift, see discussion entry.

 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All

コメント


ABOUT US

I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It’s easy. Just click “Edit Text” or double click me to add your own content and make changes to the font. Feel free to drag and drop me anywhere.

  • Grey Facebook Icon
  • Grey Twitter Icon
  • Grey YouTube Icon

© 2023 BY EZ ELECTRONICS. PROUDLY CREATED WITH WIX.COM

NEW RELEASES

I'm a paragraph. Click here to add your own text and edit me. It’s easy. Just click “Edit Text” or double click me to add your own content and make changes to the font.

Thanks for submitting!

bottom of page