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Best PSVR2 Games to Play in 2026

The best PSVR2 games span jaw-dropping showcases, fast shooters, rhythm hits and chill exploration — here is what to play first, with comfort notes and buying advice.

The best PSVR2 games include showcase experiences like Horizon Call of the Mountain, Gran Turismo 7 in VR and the Resident Evil Village and Resident Evil 4 VR modes, alongside genre favourites such as Beat Saber, Pistol Whip, Synapse and Kayak VR: Mirage. PSVR2 is a PS5-only headset, so you need a PlayStation 5 (the headset does not work on PS4 or standalone), and most of these titles take full advantage of the headset's OLED HDR displays, eye tracking, headset rumble and the adaptive triggers on the Sense controllers.

This guide breaks the library down by what you actually want from a session — a graphical showpiece, twitchy action, a workout, or a calm place to unwind — and flags how intense each pick is so you can match games to your VR legs. Availability on the PlayStation Store can change, so always check a title is currently available and confirm it lists PSVR2 support before you buy.

What makes a game one of the best PSVR2 games?

Not every VR game earns its place on a "best of" list just by existing. The standouts tend to nail one or more of these:

  • Presence — the feeling that you are really there, driven by stereoscopic depth, scale and convincing hands or tools.
  • Use of PSVR2 hardware — OLED HDR contrast, foveated rendering powered by eye tracking, headset rumble for impacts and the Sense controllers' adaptive triggers and finger touch detection.
  • Comfort design — smart vignettes, teleport and smooth-locomotion options, and adjustable turning so more people can play for longer.
  • Replayability — leaderboards, difficulty tiers, endless modes or sheer hand-crafted polish that pulls you back in.

The picks below all clear that bar in their own way. Where a flat (non-VR) PS5 version also exists, we have noted it, because some of the best PSVR2 experiences are VR modes bolted onto already-great games.

Showcase and VR-defining games

These are the titles to hand a controller to when someone has never tried PSVR2. They are the system sellers.

Horizon Call of the Mountain

Built ground-up for PSVR2, this is the headline first-party showcase. You climb, paddle and shoot a bow through the lush Horizon world, and the sense of vertical scale — looking up at a towering machine, or down off a cliff face — is exactly the kind of thing flat screens cannot do. It is more of a guided adventure than an open-world epic, but as a demonstration of presence and visual fidelity it is hard to beat.

Gran Turismo 7 (VR mode)

If you own a wheel, GT7 in VR is one of the most compelling reasons to own the headset. The entire single-player and multiplayer game is playable in VR, putting you in the cockpit with full stereoscopic depth — judging apexes and braking points feels dramatically more natural than on a flat screen. It is a flat PS5 racing game too, so you are not locked into VR, but the headset transforms it. Sim-racing fans should also browse our wider best PS5 racing games roundup for wheel-and-pedal companions.

Resident Evil Village and Resident Evil 4 (VR modes)

Capcom added free VR modes to both Resident Evil Village and the Resident Evil 4 remake on PSVR2, and they are spectacular. You physically reload, aim down sights and rummage through your case, and the horror lands far harder when a Lycan or a chainsaw-wielding villager lunges at you. These are full-length campaigns, not demos, which makes them some of the best-value experiences on the platform. Just be warned: they are intense. Horror fans should also see our best PS5 horror games for flat-screen scares to round out the night.

Synapse

A stylish, eye-tracking telekinesis shooter where you literally look at objects to grab and hurl them while shooting with the other hand. It is one of the cleanest demonstrations of why eye tracking matters in VR — the targeting feels almost telepathic. Stark monochrome-with-red art direction makes it instantly readable and a great party piece.

Other standout showcases

Depending on what is currently available, also look at Pavlov (a deep multiplayer shooter sandbox), The Walking Dead: Saints & Sinners (a meaty survival sim with physics-driven melee), and Star Wars: Tales from the Galaxy's Edge. Each shows a different strength of the hardware, from social multiplayer to physical immersion.

Best PSVR2 shooters

VR shooters live or die on how good it feels to handle a weapon, and the Sense controllers — with their finger detection and adaptive triggers — make reloading, racking a slide and pulling a stiff trigger genuinely satisfying.

Pistol Whip

Part rhythm game, part John-Wick power fantasy. You move on rails through stylised levels, shooting and dodging to the beat. It is endlessly replayable thanks to modifiers and a rotating set of scenes, and it is comfortable enough that it works as a regular go-to even on days you do not feel like a full-intensity session.

Crossfire: Sierra Squad

A bombastic, arcade-leaning military shooter with a huge campaign and co-op support. Hordes of enemies, lots of weapons and a focus on pure shooting fun rather than survival-sim fiddliness. Great when you just want to blast through waves.

Pavlov

The closest thing PSVR2 has to a hardcore multiplayer shooter. Manual mag-loading, weighty gunplay and a busy community across competitive and casual modes. There is a learning curve, but for players who want depth and online competition it is a cornerstone of the library.

Honourable mentions

If they are currently listed, Vertigo 2 (a single-player sci-fi shooter-adventure) and Synapse (above) both scratch the shooter itch from very different angles.

Rhythm and arcade

Rhythm games were made for VR. They are easy to pick up, hard to put down, and double as a sneaky workout.

Beat Saber

The defining VR rhythm game. Slash colour-coded blocks with two lightsabers in time to music. The base track list plus paid music packs give it near-endless legs, and the difficulty curve scales from "fun for grandma" to "this is genuinely a workout." If you buy one rhythm game, start here.

Synth Riders

A flowing, dance-focused alternative to Beat Saber where you ride and surf through notes rather than chopping them. The vibe is more about movement and groove, and it has a strong catalogue of licensed tracks. Many players own both because they scratch different itches.

Arcade and party picks

For lighter, pick-up-and-play sessions, keep an eye out for Pistol Whip (above) and various arcade-style titles. These are ideal when friends are over and you want short, readable rounds with a quick learning curve.

Best PSVR2 horror games

PSVR2's OLED panels deliver deep blacks, which is exactly what horror wants — and being inside the scene removes the safety of a screen between you and the monster. This is not the genre to start your VR journey with, but for veterans it is the most intense thing the headset does.

The Dark Pictures: Switchback VR

A spiritual successor to the on-rails light-gun horror tradition, built specifically for PSVR2. You ride a slow cart through nightmare set-pieces, shooting and reacting to jump scares, with the headset's eye tracking used for some genuinely sinister "blink and they move" moments. It is a polished, purpose-built scare machine.

Resident Evil Village and Resident Evil 4 (VR modes)

Covered above, but they belong here too. Being able to physically peek around a corner, then flinch as something charges, is horror at its most visceral. Both are full campaigns, so there is a lot of fright for your money. For flat-screen alternatives, our best PS5 horror games guide has plenty more.

A note on intensity

Horror plus VR plus fast movement is the most demanding combination for comfort. If you are newer to VR, ease in with calmer titles first and build up your "VR legs" before diving into a survival-horror campaign.

Exploration and chill

Not every session needs to be a workout or a fright. Some of the most memorable PSVR2 moments are quiet ones, and these are also the friendliest games for newcomers and for sharing with family.

Kayak VR: Mirage

Frequently the first thing people show off to skeptics. You paddle through gorgeous, photoreal environments — fjords, tropical reefs, icy coasts — using natural rowing motions. It is calming, stunning, and includes a time-trial mode if you want a competitive edge. As a pure "wow" demo, it is right up there with the showcases.

No Man's Sky (VR)

The entire space-survival-exploration epic is playable in VR. Flying a ship, walking alien worlds and building bases at full scale is exactly the kind of grand, presence-driven experience VR was made for. It is also a flat PS5 game with years of free updates, so it represents enormous value whether or not you are in the headset.

Moss: Book II

A storybook action-adventure where you guide Quill, a tiny sword-wielding mouse, through diorama-like levels. You are both a character in the world and a helpful spirit moving pieces around. It is charming, gentle on comfort thanks to its fixed-diorama design, and a great pick for younger or VR-cautious players.

Walkabout Mini Golf

Deceptively brilliant. Relaxed, social mini-golf across a growing set of imaginative courses, with excellent cross-play and a chilled-out community. It is the kind of game people sink hundreds of hours into without noticing, and one of the most comfortable experiences on the platform.

Best PSVR2 fitness games

Because VR gets your whole body moving, several titles double as genuine exercise. A few are built specifically as workout tools, and many of the rhythm and shooter games above (Beat Saber, Synth Riders, Pistol Whip) will work up a sweat on higher difficulties.

  • Rhythm games as cardio — crank Beat Saber or Synth Riders to expert and you have a real arm-and-core workout.
  • Dedicated fitness apps — look for purpose-built boxing- and routine-based fitness titles on the PlayStation Store; check current availability and PSVR2 support before buying, as the lineup evolves.
  • Comfort tip for fitness — these are room-scale, motion-heavy sessions, so clear your play space and stay hydrated.

Pair a fitness habit with a deal — track price drops on the PS Store deals page so you can build your library without overpaying.

Comparison table

GameTypeIntensity / comfortWhy play
Horizon Call of the MountainShowcase adventureModerate (climbing/heights)Best-looking ground-up PSVR2 showcase
Gran Turismo 7 (VR)Racing simModerate (cockpit, mostly seated)Cockpit immersion, huge content, wheel support
Resident Evil Village / RE4 (VR)Horror / actionHigh (intense, fast)Full campaigns reimagined in VR
SynapseEye-tracking shooterModerate to highShowpiece for eye-tracking telekinesis
Pistol WhipRhythm shooterModerate (on-rails, comfortable)Endlessly replayable action to music
Crossfire: Sierra SquadArcade shooterModerate to highBig, bombastic wave-shooting with co-op
PavlovMultiplayer shooterHighDeep, hardcore online gunplay
Beat SaberRhythmModerate (stationary, scalable)The definitive VR rhythm workout
Synth RidersRhythm / danceModerate (stationary)Flowing, groove-focused alternative
The Dark Pictures: Switchback VRHorrorHigh (jump scares, on-rails)Purpose-built PSVR2 scare ride
Kayak VR: MirageExploration / chillLow (seated, calm)Stunning, relaxing "wow" demo
No Man's Sky (VR)Exploration / survivalModerate (flight, locomotion options)Entire universe at full scale
Moss: Book IIAdventureLow (fixed diorama)Charming, very comfortable storybook
Walkabout Mini GolfSocial / chillVery lowRelaxed, endlessly playable mini-golf

Comfort and motion sickness

VR comfort is personal — what makes one player queasy is fine for another — but a few principles hold for almost everyone.

Intensity comes mainly from artificial movement. Games where you move through the world using a stick (smooth locomotion) are the hardest on your stomach. Games where the world moves to you, or where you are seated in a cockpit, on rails, or in a fixed diorama, are far gentler. That is why Kayak VR, Moss: Book II and Walkabout Mini Golf are great starting points, while a fast smooth-locomotion shooter or horror campaign is best saved for later.

Use the comfort settings. Most good PSVR2 games offer:

  • Teleport vs smooth locomotion — teleport is far easier on newcomers.
  • Snap turning vs smooth turning — snap turning (rotating in fixed increments) reduces nausea for many people.
  • Vignettes / tunnelling — narrowing your field of view during movement cuts down on motion sickness; leave it on while you build tolerance.

Build your VR legs gradually. Start with short 15–20 minute sessions on comfortable titles. Most players acclimatise within a week or two and can then handle far more intense games. Stop the moment you feel "off" — pushing through nausea trains your body to associate VR with feeling sick, which is exactly the wrong lesson.

Practical setup matters too. Play in a cleared space, make sure the headset is adjusted so the image is sharp (a blurry image is a fast route to a headache), and take breaks. A small fan can help, and being well-rested and hydrated makes a noticeable difference.

Is PSVR2 worth it?

PSVR2 is worth it if you already own (or plan to own) a PS5 and you want the most accessible high-end VR experience on a console — no PC required, one cable, and a genuinely impressive feature set with OLED HDR displays, eye-tracked foveated rendering, headset rumble and the Sense controllers' adaptive triggers. The showcase library above, led by Horizon Call of the Mountain, GT7's VR mode and the Resident Evil VR modes, delivers experiences you simply cannot get on a flat screen.

The honest caveats: it is a premium purchase on top of a PS5, the library is smaller than long-established PC VR ecosystems, and as with all VR there is a comfort learning curve. A PC adapter exists in general terms for players who also want to use the headset with a computer, which widens the potential game pool — check current details and requirements before counting on it.

If you mainly play flat games, the headset is a luxury rather than a necessity. But for players who value novelty, immersion and the "nothing else feels like this" factor, it is one of the most exciting ways to use a PS5. For non-VR alternatives, browse the best PS5 exclusives and our wider best PS5 games of 2026 roundups.

How to buy PSVR2 games for less

VR games go on sale just like everything else on the PlayStation Store, and some of the showcase titles see meaningful discounts during seasonal sales. A few habits to save money:

  • Track prices, do not impulse buy. Use the PS Store deals hub to watch for discounts and set price-drop alerts on the titles you want.
  • Prioritise VR modes you already own. If you have GT7, Resident Evil Village or No Man's Sky, their VR modes are free — that is a strong starter library at no extra cost.
  • Buy comfortable titles first. Kayak VR, Moss and Walkabout Mini Golf are crowd-pleasers that build your VR legs and double as demos for friends.
  • Always confirm PSVR2 support. Some games have separate flat and VR listings; check a title currently lists PSVR2 before you buy.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best PSVR2 games?

The best PSVR2 games include showcase titles like Horizon Call of the Mountain, Gran Turismo 7's VR mode and the Resident Evil Village and Resident Evil 4 VR modes; shooters like Pistol Whip, Crossfire: Sierra Squad and Pavlov; rhythm hits Beat Saber and Synth Riders; the horror ride The Dark Pictures: Switchback VR; and chill standouts Kayak VR: Mirage, No Man's Sky in VR, Moss: Book II and Walkabout Mini Golf. Availability changes, so confirm a title is currently available with PSVR2 support before buying.

Do you need a PS5 for PSVR2?

Yes. PSVR2 is a PS5-only headset and requires a PlayStation 5 to work — it does not function on PS4, and it is not a standalone headset. You connect it to the PS5 with a single USB-C cable.

Can PSVR2 play PSVR1 games?

No, not natively. PSVR2 is not backwards compatible with the original PSVR library by default — those games would need to be ported or remade for the new headset. Many of the best original-PSVR titles have received PSVR2 versions (Moss being a good example), but you cannot simply insert old PSVR games and expect them to run.

What are the best PSVR2 horror games?

The standout PSVR2 horror picks are The Dark Pictures: Switchback VR (a purpose-built on-rails scare ride) and the VR modes for Resident Evil Village and the Resident Evil 4 remake, which turn full campaigns into intensely immersive survival horror. These are high-intensity, so build up your VR comfort first. For flat-screen scares, see our best PS5 horror games guide.

Is PSVR2 worth it?

It is worth it if you own a PS5 and want premium, plug-and-play console VR with OLED HDR visuals, eye tracking, headset rumble and adaptive-trigger controllers. The showcase library delivers experiences flat screens cannot match. It is a premium add-on with a smaller library than PC VR and a comfort learning curve, so it is best for players who specifically want immersion and novelty rather than a must-have for everyone.

Are PSVR2 games comfortable, or will they make me sick?

It depends on the game and the player. Seated, on-rails and fixed-diorama games (Kayak VR: Mirage, Moss: Book II, Walkabout Mini Golf) are very comfortable, while fast smooth-locomotion shooters and horror titles are more intense. Use teleport movement, snap turning and comfort vignettes, start with short sessions, and most people build tolerance within a week or two.

Which PSVR2 game should I buy first?

For a comfortable, jaw-dropping first session, Kayak VR: Mirage or Horizon Call of the Mountain are excellent. Beat Saber is the best all-round pick-up-and-play game, and if you already own GT7, No Man's Sky or Resident Evil Village, their free VR modes are a great no-cost starting point.

Do PSVR2 games support the headset's special features?

Many do. The best titles use the OLED HDR displays for deep contrast, eye tracking for foveated rendering (and gameplay, as in Synapse), headset rumble for impacts, and the Sense controllers' adaptive triggers and finger detection for realistic weapon handling. Feature support varies per game, so check the store listing for specifics.

Can you use PSVR2 on PC?

In general terms, a PC adapter exists that lets the headset connect to a computer, which broadens the catalogue of games you can play beyond the PS5 library. Exact features and requirements differ from the native PS5 experience, so check current details before relying on it.

Where can I find PSVR2 games on sale?

VR titles are discounted in PlayStation Store sales just like other games. Track current discounts and set price-drop alerts on the PS Store deals page so you can pick up showcase titles when they drop in price.

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