You do this by sending a Peep to incubate it, but you only have a short window to get to each egg before they go bad. You are tasked with building a community of Peeps, which you must hatch yourself when their eggs drop magically from the sky. No matter how you play, the gameplay itself is, like I said earlier, is an oddity. If you do decide to switch off that function, using the right stick to look around is second nature to most of us now, I’d wager. Using the motion sensor is meant to be the most responsive alternative to using the headset, but it’s way too finicky to use for any real length of time. The idea behind it is great in theory, as even the menus are controlled by pointing the camera at each option, just as you would be expected to look at these things when using the VR headset. First things first: the Dualshock 4’s motion sensor is the default setting for the camera, which I heartily recommend switching off. This is probably because it was a VR game, and most of you didn’t fancy shelling out upwards of £400 on a piece of kit that may or may not be a flash in the pan.īut hey, you can now play Tethered without owning Playstation VR, and it’s quite interesting how it emulates the VR experience on a regular ol’ television. Strategy games seem to be finding a bit of an audience again on consoles, with Halo Wars 2 and the upcoming Valhalla Hills, but Secret Sorcery’s oddity Tethered may have passed you by when it was released on PS4 back in October.
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