Compara los precios de Cave Digger VR en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por VRKiwi. Publicado por VRKiwi. Lanzado el 9/5/2018. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Action, Adventure, Simulation.

Physically swinging a pickaxe at a glowing vein in VR hits different than clicking a mouse button. Whether that difference carries a whole game is the real question here.

My instinct with any sim or strategy title is to ask how deep the decision layer goes. Cave Digger VR answers that question honestly: not very deep at all, but it knows exactly what it is and commits to it with surprising confidence. You drop into a saloon in a quirky alt-western setting, step into a mining elevator, and spend timed runs hacking at cave walls for gems and artifacts. Earnings come back to the surface with you, get converted into currency, and that currency funds upgrades and new tools. The loop is short, tactile, and almost meditative once it clicks. The tool progression is where the game earns its keep. You start with a basic pickaxe and gradually unlock dynamite for blasting whole sections of wall, circular saws for delicate artifact excavation, and oil drills for specific rock types. Each tool demands a different physical motion with your controllers, which is the entire point. Physically lobbing a stick of dynamite, then physically ducking back as the wall explodes, is the kind of moment that justifies owning a VR headset. A companion chest called Chompy follows you into the caves and automatically sells whatever you feed into it, which is a genuinely clever quality-of-life mechanic that removes tedious backtracking. The catch is that Chompy has one ore type she refuses to eat, randomized per playthrough, so you still need to plan your load management around her pickiness. Once you accumulate enough funds, the elevator-only experience opens up into a train network with four distinct underground zones to explore horizontally. This shift in structure is where the game grows from a score-chasing novelty into something with a bit more texture. The train levels add exploration variety and house most of the nine endings, which are triggered by choices and discoveries rather than a traditional story. Finding the collectible artifacts scattered through the caves is a highlight: items range from the expected (fossils, old china) to the absurd (d20s, copies of E.T. for the Atari 2600, mosquitoes trapped in amber). A radio narrator with a dry, deadpan delivery comments on your actions throughout, and his non-sequiturs are genuinely funny on first encounter. Most of them only fire once per run, so there is a mild incentive to replay just to catch what you missed. The honest criticism is that the grind to fund later upgrades can feel slow, especially once the novelty of each tool wears off. The randomized mine floors provide some variety but the loop of swing-collect-sell-upgrade does not reinvent itself. Steam reviews sit at a mixed 65 percent across a small sample, which tracks: this is a game where the physical VR engagement is the entire value proposition, and players who treat it like a flat-screen sim will bounce off it fast. Visuals are functional rather than impressive, and some players have reported occasional clipping or getting stuck on geometry. None of these are dealbreakers at the game's price tier, but they are worth knowing before you commit. For newcomers to VR who want something low-stakes and oddly satisfying to demonstrate the medium to friends, Cave Digger VR genuinely delivers. The learning curve is minimal, the humor keeps runs from feeling sterile, and chasing all nine endings gives completionists a reason to stay past the initial few hours. Just go in through the VR build, not the flat-screen mode, where the physical interaction collapses into mouse clicks and the game loses almost everything that makes it work. Diego, Scout Team

Cave Digger VR

Cave Digger VR

9 may 2018VRKiwi
GamerScout opina

Physically swinging a pickaxe at a glowing vein in VR hits different than clicking a mouse button. Whether that difference carries a whole game is the real question here.

PC
Steam Deck UnsupportedProtonDB Platinum
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.62

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My instinct with any sim or strategy title is to ask how deep the decision layer goes. Cave Digger VR answers that question honestly: not very deep at all, but it knows exactly what it is and commits to it with surprising confidence. You drop into a saloon in a quirky alt-western setting, step into a mining elevator, and spend timed runs hacking at cave walls for gems and artifacts. Earnings come back to the surface with you, get converted into currency, and that currency funds upgrades and new tools. The loop is short, tactile, and almost meditative once it clicks. The tool progression is where the game earns its keep. You start with a basic pickaxe and gradually unlock dynamite for blasting whole sections of wall, circular saws for delicate artifact excavation, and oil drills for specific rock types. Each tool demands a different physical motion with your controllers, which is the entire point. Physically lobbing a stick of dynamite, then physically ducking back as the wall explodes, is the kind of moment that justifies owning a VR headset. A companion chest called Chompy follows you into the caves and automatically sells whatever you feed into it, which is a genuinely clever quality-of-life mechanic that removes tedious backtracking. The catch is that Chompy has one ore type she refuses to eat, randomized per playthrough, so you still need to plan your load management around her pickiness. Once you accumulate enough funds, the elevator-only experience opens up into a train network with four distinct underground zones to explore horizontally. This shift in structure is where the game grows from a score-chasing novelty into something with a bit more texture. The train levels add exploration variety and house most of the nine endings, which are triggered by choices and discoveries rather than a traditional story. Finding the collectible artifacts scattered through the caves is a highlight: items range from the expected (fossils, old china) to the absurd (d20s, copies of E.T. for the Atari 2600, mosquitoes trapped in amber). A radio narrator with a dry, deadpan delivery comments on your actions throughout, and his non-sequiturs are genuinely funny on first encounter. Most of them only fire once per run, so there is a mild incentive to replay just to catch what you missed. The honest criticism is that the grind to fund later upgrades can feel slow, especially once the novelty of each tool wears off. The randomized mine floors provide some variety but the loop of swing-collect-sell-upgrade does not reinvent itself. Steam reviews sit at a mixed 65 percent across a small sample, which tracks: this is a game where the physical VR engagement is the entire value proposition, and players who treat it like a flat-screen sim will bounce off it fast. Visuals are functional rather than impressive, and some players have reported occasional clipping or getting stuck on geometry. None of these are dealbreakers at the game's price tier, but they are worth knowing before you commit. For newcomers to VR who want something low-stakes and oddly satisfying to demonstrate the medium to friends, Cave Digger VR genuinely delivers. The learning curve is minimal, the humor keeps runs from feeling sterile, and chasing all nine endings gives completionists a reason to stay past the initial few hours. Just go in through the VR build, not the flat-screen mode, where the physical interaction collapses into mouse clicks and the game loses almost everything that makes it work.

Diego
Diego · Scout Team

Strategy & simulation

Etiquetas

singleplayerachievementstier:sub-5VR-RequiredPhysics InteractionTool ProgressionTimed RunsDark HumorSecret EndingsElevator LoopArtifact Collecting

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 10
Memory
8 GB RAM
Storage
400 MB available space
Graphics
NVIDIA GTX 970 / AMD Radeon R9 290 or greater
Processor
Intel i5-4590 equivalent or greater
VR Support
SteamVR or Oculus PC

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
VRKiwi
Distribuidora
VRKiwi
Fecha de lanzamiento
9 may 2018

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Cave Digger VR?

Cave Digger VR está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Cave Digger VR?

Cave Digger VR se lanzó el 9 de mayo de 2018.

¿Quién desarrolló Cave Digger VR?

Cave Digger VR fue desarrollado por VRKiwi.