Sat.Feb 29, 2020

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Lies Below Is A New VR Survival Horror Game For Oculus Inspired By Japanese Horror Manga

VRScout

The unsettling narrative-driven experience launches on Oculus Quest next month followed by Rift S in April. . Drifter Entertainment, the developer behind Robo Recall: Unplugged and the heavily-slept on Gunheart , today unveiled their latest project, Lies Below , a VR survival horror game that takes inspiration from a combination of macabre games and television, such as Silent Hill and The Walking Dead , as well as classic Japanese horror comics. .

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Lies Beneath is a new VR Horror From Gunheart Developer Drifter Entertainment

Peter Graham

This past week has already seen White Door Games announce the terrifying Cosmophobia and now another equally unsettling virtual reality (VR) horror has surfaced. Drifter Entertainment, the studio behind Robo Recall: Unplugged and Gunheart has revealed its next project, Lies Beneath for Oculus Quest and Oculus Rift. A survival horror which has been inspired by classics such as Resident Evil and Silent Hill, Lies Beneath takes place in the sleepy town of Slumber, Alaska. “Returnin

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Releases Recap: February 24 – 28

Oculus

This week, we released several titles and updates across the Oculus Platform.

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Multiverse virtual worlds will be healthier for society than our current social networks

TechCrunch VR

The basis of the classic James Bond film “Tomorrow Never Dies” is an evil media mogul who instigates war between the U.K. and China because it will be great for TV ratings. There’s been a wake-up call recently that our most popular social networks have been indirectly designed to divide populations into enemy camps and reward sensational content, but without the personal responsibility of Bond’s nemesis because they’re algorithmically driven.

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The Future of eLearning in 2022: A Sensitive Eye for Authentic Translation and Localization

Speaker: Chris Paxton McMillin, President of D3 Training Solutions

To avoid awkward and sometimes disastrous learning content, instructional designers must use authentic translation in the right context to get optimal results. For example, even a simple phrase like “got milk” translates to “are you lactating” in Mexico. Can you imagine what a straight translation might do to your course? With over 317 million people in the US and over 6.7 billion potential customers in the world, personalizing training seems logical.