Audioshield Explained

Audioshield
Developer:Dylan Fitterer
Publisher:Dylan Fitterer
Engine:Unity
Platforms:Windows
Released:April 5, 2016
Genre:Music
Modes:Single-player

Audioshield is a music video game created by Dylan Fitterer for the HTC Vive. The game generates levels based on music supplied by the player. The player blocks incoming "notes" with a shield of matching color.

Gameplay

The player uses the HTC Vive's handheld motion sensing controls to operate two shields, colored blue and orange. The player uses these shields to block incoming orbs of the corresponding color.[1] Sometimes the player must block purple orbs by holding both of the shields together.[2]

The level generation is done in a similar way to Fitterer's previous Audiosurf series. The user supplies the song, and the game generates a series of orbs to match the beat of the song.[3] Songs can be stored locally, and they could run through YouTube Streaming before YouTube blocked this feature as it violated its license policy.[4]

Reception

Audioshield got generally favorable reviews from critics, with an 81/100 score on Metacritic. Some praised Audioshield for its innovative approach to the music game genre,[5] while others opined that the game lacked replayability, even with a large variety of songs.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: 'Audioshield' Turns Your Music Library Into a VR Game. 2016-01-27. UploadVR. 2017-03-12. en-US.
  2. Web site: Audioshield is the best virtual reality game I've played yet. VentureBeat. 29 March 2016. 2017-03-12.
  3. Web site: Review: Audioshield. Destructoid. en. 2017-03-12.
  4. News: Audioshield VR Ditches Soundcloud For YouTube Streaming. 2016-09-29. Tom's Hardware. 2017-03-12. en.
  5. Web site: This virtual reality game lets you punch your music in the face. 2016-06-26. Recode. 2017-03-12.
  6. Web site: Game review: Audioshield is the first VR music game. Metro.co.uk. GameCentral for. 2016-04-19. Metro. 2017-03-12.