

#Nintendo switch emulator for majoras mask Pc
I tried some of the fancy new AAA PC games and I felt I just was not having as much fun as I did gaming as a kid since everything felt as the same-old rehashed recipes but with way fancier graphics and different stories, so I was just left yawning and bored quickly despite the realistic graphics and major hype.īut gaming in VR really makes me feel immersed and I finally feel like I'm having genuine fun like I'm a kid again. The Quest put the fun back in gaming for me. Now a dad, I’m in a similar position where I rarely have time to play.
#Nintendo switch emulator for majoras mask Ps4
Bonus: I tell the kids they can’t use it till they’re teenagers, so whilst they hog the PS4 for Minecraft, the Quest is exclusively for my use. I’m looking forward to seeing this platform develop.


It’s very intuitive - you grab weapons from different points on your body, reload with physical motions, and there’s only a few actions that map to button presses, so it’s made it easy to pick it up again after a break. I found that most console games are too complex for me to get back into after a week or two away - the mental effort needed to remember the controls puts me off after a long day of work followed by looking after the kids - but RE4 VR doesn’t have this problem. Fighting your way through a fully realised VR environment (massive castles, underground caverns etc) is something new to me. The immersion is amazing, I haven’t been this absorbed in a game in a long time. But I adore the Oculus Quest 2! I’ve just completed Resident Evil 4 (it took several weeks, but it’s the first time I’ve completed a AAA game in years).
