
Drone Hunter VR
A VR-only alien wave shooter with actual boss fights that require thought, not just trigger spam. Decent for a quick headset demo; thin on long-term depth.
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About Drone Hunter VR
I put Drone Hunter VR through its paces expecting another forgettable wave shooter you dust off to show a headset to someone new, and it mostly is that, but with one genuinely surprising design choice baked in. The core loop has you wielding the DH125, a hybrid alien-human weapon, against incoming waves of enemy drones. You stand your ground, you shoot, you survive. As far as VR arcade shooters go in 2024, this is about as stripped-down a premise as they come, and the dated visuals make that clear within the first thirty seconds. One press outlet called it looking like a mobile game, and that description still holds. What saves the experience from total irrelevance is the boss structure. Multiple reviewers across Metacritic point specifically to the boss encounters as the reason they stuck around, and after working through them it is easy to see why. These are not just damage-sponge bullet walls. Each boss asks you to read a pattern and find a mechanical answer, which is the smallest but most important form of decision-making you can inject into a reflex-shooter. The hard difficulty setting turns those fights into a physical commitment, with enough dodge-and-aim intensity to work up a genuine sweat. That is a real design win for an indie debut from a small studio, regardless of how thin everything around it feels. The weaknesses are structural and largely unfixable at this point in the game's life. There is no mod support, no progression system worth discussing, no build variety, and the player population is effectively zero. Steam leaderboards exist on paper, but competing for a top spot against a ghost town is motivating to nobody. The achievement list runs to 46 entries, which at least gives completionists a reason to revisit the harder difficulty tiers, but the content itself runs short. You will see everything there is to see well before an hour is up. For strategy-minded buyers, the honest framing is this: Drone Hunter VR is a proof-of-concept from Ignibit's early VR days, later ported to Gear VR where it found a warmer reception. It is not a game you play for fifty hours. It is a game you pull out when someone puts on a headset for the first time and you want to hand them something with a clear objective and satisfying tactile feedback. The boss fights provide a brief moment of genuine engagement that rises above the wave-shooter baseline. Everything else is filler. Go in with calibrated expectations, keep the session short, and you will walk away satisfied with what it does in its narrow lane. Diego, Scout Team
Tags
System Requirements
Minimum
- OS
- Win 7 or higher
- Memory
- 8 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 10
- Storage
- 2 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 970
- Processor
- Intel i5
- Sound Card
- Integrated
- VR Support
- SteamVR. Standing or Room Scale
Recommended
- OS
- Win 7 or higher
- Memory
- 16 GB RAM
- DirectX
- Version 11
- Storage
- 2 GB available space
- Graphics
- GTX 980 or better
- Processor
- Intel i7
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Game Info
- Developer
- Ignibit
- Publisher
- Ignibit
- Release Date
- Dec 20, 2016