Rez is a musical rail shooter developed by United Game Artists and published by Sega for the Dreamcast and PlayStation 2.It was released in Japan in 2001, followed by releases to the United States and Europe in 2002. Because it was created so much later than the rest of the content it looks spectacular, and adds full movement as opposed to the on-rails style of the rest of the main game. Survive the cyberspace gauntlet of the Project-K network and reawaken Eden to save a world on the verge of societal collapse.
Experience 360 degrees of mind-blowing synesthesia as you blast through waves of enemies and giant transforming bosses, with colors and sounds that sync and blend to the beat of Rez’s legendary techno soundtrack. The game was ported to Xbox 360 as Rez HD by Q Entertainment and HexaDrive in 2008. In VR, Area X is Rez at its zenith. Playable on your desktop or in fully immersive VR. Check out these official review guidelines to find out more about our process.
It also includes a new mode called Area X, which is clearly a test run for a potential Rez 2. Rez Infinite is now availabe on PlayStation VR for $29.99 and Oculus Rift and HTC Vive for $19.99. When Rez Infinite was released in 2016 it included a brand new level called Area X, and it’s a truly mesmerizing experience. Rez Infinite The legendary action-shooter finally comes to PC, and in style! Blast your way through mind-melting visuals and amazing beats, all in your quest through cyberspace to save a world on the verge of collapse.
You need to remember that Rez infinite in a PC port of a PS4 port of an X360 port of a PS2 port of a Dreamcast game. However, Rez Infinite does more than just add VR support and brush up the sound and visuals. Gameplay was never too difficult, but now it’s even easier to keep pace with swarms of enemies thanks to motion-controlled targeting in the VR edition. Game engines back in the days were very different from modern PC game engines. A remake of the 2001 cult classic Rez, Rez Infinite is a pitch-perfect VR adaptation that makes us feel as though Rez was always meant for VR. Rez Infinite's Area X in VR engages your entire body, thumping your synapses in time with the music and forcing you to move. Best VR Game winner at The Game Awards 2016! Whether you’re playing in VR or the old fashioned way, Rez’s hypnotic brand of rhythm-based rail shooting is visually striking, and surprisingly deep despite its relatively simple gameplay. When you run Rez Classic on a 90/120/244Hz display, the game runs at 60Hz and the display will interpolate in whatever way it's designed to interpolate.