Compara los precios de TacoFace en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por KLNK Inc.. Publicado por KLNK Inc.. Lanzado el 21/12/2016. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Casual, Indie.

Rocket-launcher arms, laser-blaster eyes, raining tacos: TacoFace is a VR micro-game that commits fully to its absurd premise and asks almost nothing of you in return.

I want to be honest with you: TacoFace is not a game in any deep sense. It is a single VR joke, executed with a straight face and a timer. You are a person whose arms have been replaced by rocket launchers and whose eyes shoot lasers, and tacos are falling from the sky. That is the entire premise, and KLNK Inc. from southern California did not dress it up with lore or onboarding. You put on your headset, you pick a mode, and you get to work. There are exactly two modes. Time Attack drops you into 60 seconds of pure taco-catching with no threats, no bombs, nothing to worry about except mouthing as many falling tacos as you can before the clock runs out. It is the gentler of the two, good for first-timers or anyone who just wants the silliness without the pressure. Survival raises the stakes by mixing bombs into the cascade of tacos. You have to use your rocket-launcher arms or laser-blaster eyes to destroy the bombs before they reach you, while still catching the tacos. There is a Steam leaderboard attached, which means someone, somewhere, is grinding this. I respect that person enormously. As a pure VR novelty, TacoFace does what it sets out to do. The tracked controller support means your arms feel genuinely involved, and pointing your gaze to fire lasers is the kind of thing that makes non-VR friends in the room immediately want a turn. The moment-to-moment loop in Survival has a real rhythm to it: scan the sky, fire at the bombs, tilt your head to catch a taco, repeat. It is not deep, but the loop is clean and the absurdist premise gives it just enough personality to avoid feeling like a tech demo. The honest limits are obvious. This is a sub-five-dollar, sub-thirty-minute experience with almost no community footprint and only four user reviews to its name on Steam. There is no progression system, no unlockable content, no story, and no reason to return after you have posted your score. The hardware ask is also non-trivial for what it delivers: the Steam listing requires a GTX 970 or equivalent, which feels steep for falling tacos. It also requires VR hardware to play at all, so if you are reading this on a flat-screen PC with no headset, this is simply not for you. Where TacoFace earns a small, genuine recommendation is as a party piece. It is the kind of two-minute handoff experience that works in a room full of people who have never tried VR. The premise communicates itself instantly, the controls are self-explanatory, and the leaderboard gives competitive types something to argue about. For that narrow use case, it delivers. Just do not go in expecting a game you will still be thinking about tomorrow. Kai, Scout Team

TacoFace

TacoFace

21 dic 2016KLNK Inc.
GamerScout opina

Rocket-launcher arms, laser-blaster eyes, raining tacos: TacoFace is a VR micro-game that commits fully to its absurd premise and asks almost nothing of you in return.

PC
Mejor precio disponible
€0.00
en N/A
Mínimo histórico: €0.53

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I want to be honest with you: TacoFace is not a game in any deep sense. It is a single VR joke, executed with a straight face and a timer. You are a person whose arms have been replaced by rocket launchers and whose eyes shoot lasers, and tacos are falling from the sky. That is the entire premise, and KLNK Inc. from southern California did not dress it up with lore or onboarding. You put on your headset, you pick a mode, and you get to work. There are exactly two modes. Time Attack drops you into 60 seconds of pure taco-catching with no threats, no bombs, nothing to worry about except mouthing as many falling tacos as you can before the clock runs out. It is the gentler of the two, good for first-timers or anyone who just wants the silliness without the pressure. Survival raises the stakes by mixing bombs into the cascade of tacos. You have to use your rocket-launcher arms or laser-blaster eyes to destroy the bombs before they reach you, while still catching the tacos. There is a Steam leaderboard attached, which means someone, somewhere, is grinding this. I respect that person enormously. As a pure VR novelty, TacoFace does what it sets out to do. The tracked controller support means your arms feel genuinely involved, and pointing your gaze to fire lasers is the kind of thing that makes non-VR friends in the room immediately want a turn. The moment-to-moment loop in Survival has a real rhythm to it: scan the sky, fire at the bombs, tilt your head to catch a taco, repeat. It is not deep, but the loop is clean and the absurdist premise gives it just enough personality to avoid feeling like a tech demo. The honest limits are obvious. This is a sub-five-dollar, sub-thirty-minute experience with almost no community footprint and only four user reviews to its name on Steam. There is no progression system, no unlockable content, no story, and no reason to return after you have posted your score. The hardware ask is also non-trivial for what it delivers: the Steam listing requires a GTX 970 or equivalent, which feels steep for falling tacos. It also requires VR hardware to play at all, so if you are reading this on a flat-screen PC with no headset, this is simply not for you. Where TacoFace earns a small, genuine recommendation is as a party piece. It is the kind of two-minute handoff experience that works in a room full of people who have never tried VR. The premise communicates itself instantly, the controls are self-explanatory, and the leaderboard gives competitive types something to argue about. For that narrow use case, it delivers. Just do not go in expecting a game you will still be thinking about tomorrow.

Kai
Kai · Scout Team

Indie & narrative

Etiquetas

singleplayertier:sub-5VR Party GameArcade Score AttackNovelty VRLeaderboard ChaseController RequiredShort Session

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

OS
Windows 7 SP1 or newer.
Memory
8 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 11
Storage
100 MB available space
Graphics
GeForce GTX 970 or AMD Radeon R9 290 or better.
Processor
Intel Core i5 4590 or greater.
VR Support
SteamVR

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
KLNK Inc.
Distribuidora
KLNK Inc.
Fecha de lanzamiento
21 dic 2016

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¿Cuánto cuesta TacoFace?

El precio de TacoFace cambia a menudo y varía según la tienda, la edición y la región. La tabla de precios en vivo de esta página compara las ofertas más baratas en stock de tiendas de claves de confianza como Eneba y Kinguin, para que siempre veas el precio más bajo actual antes de comprar.

¿Dónde puedo comprar TacoFace más barato?

Compara los precios de TacoFace en todas las tiendas verificadas en la tabla de precios de esta página. Listamos las ofertas de claves y tiendas más baratas en stock, actualizadas con frecuencia, para que siempre veas la mejor oferta actual antes de comprar.

¿En qué plataformas está disponible TacoFace?

TacoFace está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó TacoFace?

TacoFace se lanzó el 21 de diciembre de 2016.

¿Quién desarrolló TacoFace?

TacoFace fue desarrollado por KLNK Inc..