The Under Presents, a genre-defying VR experience that takes live theater and flips it on its head, is again offering showtimes for its immersive retelling of William Shakespeare’s The Tempest.

We had a chance to go hands-on with Tempest for its debut run back in July, and it was overall a really fun and interesting experience—especially for anyone missing out on group activities due to being stuck at home. If you’re worried about stuffy pre-modern English, you’ll be pleasantly surprised with Tempest, as actors aim to get you closer to their abridged version of the early 17th-century classic.

Now developers Tender Claws are offering a special run of Tempest during the Raindance Immersive festival, with new showtimes taking place between November 5th – 15th.

Three showtimes are offered each day, starting on the hour at 2PM, 3PM, 4PM ET (local starting time here), and are accessible as a $15 in-app purchase exclusively through the Oculus Quest Store and Oculus Rift Store. Tender Claws says to arrive at the lobby area 10 minutes before you scheduled showtime.

Each performance lasts about 45 minutes, and promises personal variations among each actor, who guides you through an immersive retelling of The Tempest, replete with costume changes, interactive bits for the whole group (max six people), and plenty of immersive environments to bring you closer to the story.

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Well before the first modern XR products hit the market, Scott recognized the potential of the technology and set out to understand and document its growth. He has been professionally reporting on the space for nearly a decade as Editor at Road to VR, authoring more than 3,500 articles on the topic. Scott brings that seasoned insight to his reporting from major industry events across the globe.
  • sfmike

    Well worth the price of admission. I think everyone should give this experience a try as it’s a lot of fun and shows the kinds of things you can do in VR that aren’t thought about that much.

    • AU

      Do you know if casting works so a spouse can watch?

  • James Harp

    I don’t think you can reserve seats to the same performance. Back in July my wife and I had tickets for the same time, we ended up in different performances. I still highly recommend this, she is not that interested in VR but was blown away by the interactivity and fun of the experience.

  • martin

    i had fun with it, its a very unique experience. the only caveat is the actor will talk to you like a child because they dont know how old you are, the simple activities will also reflect that as well. but i understand it had to be done that way. maybe its just the particular actor i got.