PlayStation quietly revealed four new PS VR2 games, and other updates
Dreams of Another, Grit & Valor – 1949, Hotel Infinity and Meteora join the PS VR2 lineup.

PlayStation may be tight-lipped about updates for PS VR2, but on June 24 the PlayStation Blog slipped in news of four upcoming games and one system highlight that VR fans won’t want to miss. These titles span genres from contemplative exploration to strategic mech combat, offering a more diverse slate than PS VR2 has enjoyed so far.
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Dreams of Another
Q-Games, the studio behind the retro-futuristic PixelJunk series, is developing Dreams of Another, a third-person action-exploration experience built around creation rather than destruction. Leveraging PS VR2’s headset visuals, haptic triggers and 3D audio, you’ll literally shape the environment—stretching beams into walkways, fusing materials into structures and unlocking new areas by thinking in three dimensions. A recent dev diary teased seamless transitions between first- and third-person views to help you interact with puzzles from different perspectives. Dreams of Another is due “later this year,” though an exact date remains under wraps.
Grit & Valor – 1949
Milky Tea Studios brings dieselpunk warfare to VR with Grit & Valor – 1949. This roguelite real-time tactics game places you in command of customizable mech squads on alternate-history battlefields aboard PS VR2, PS5, Xbox Series X|S, Switch, Steam VR and Quest. Using room-scale VR movement, you’ll reposition units, draw attack patterns and deploy special abilities with intuitive motion controls. Each run through sprawling warzones challenges you to adapt your strategy and refine your loadout. The cross-platform release arrives August 21, 2025, with PS VR2 users gaining immersive hit-feedback through the DualSense controller’s adaptive triggers.
Hotel Infinity
Studio Chyr, known for the mind-bending architecture of Manifold Garden, has crafted Hotel Infinity, a never-ending hotel full of gravity-defying puzzles. Designed exclusively for room-scale VR on PS VR2, the game forgoes comfort teleportation in favor of a two-meter movement space that lets you walk between shifting corridors. Early previews show Escher-style staircases that loop back on themselves and gravity wells that reorient entire rooms. Puzzles gradually introduce new mechanics—light refraction, mirror portals and temporal shifts—to keep you on your toes. Hotel Infinity launches “later this year,” promising a surreal retreat for puzzle enthusiasts.
Meteora
For fans of high-speed competition, Big Boot Games presents Meteora, a cosmic combat racer where you pilot living meteors through neon-lit galaxies. PS VR2’s 3D audio engine and stereo haptics immerse you in the roar of plasma engines and the shudder of near-miss collisions. Collect orbiting power-ups, dodge asteroid fields and topple rivals with energy pulses in frantic multiplayer arenas. Scheduled for a 2026 release, Meteora aims to blend the thrills of arcade racing with strategic depth.
A gorgeous DLC — Kayak VR: Yucatán
Already a highlight for its stunning environments and physics-driven paddling, Kayak VR: Mirage recently added the Yucatán DLC, letting you explore lush cenotes, mysterious caves, an abandoned mine and whitewater rapids—all with PS VR2 Sense haptics enhancing every paddle stroke. Whether you tackle the rapids solo or team up in realtime multiplayer, this DLC showcases PS VR2’s capability for serene exploration and thrilling action.
Last, but not least: Phasmophobia: Chronicle
Kinetic Games has just rolled out the Chronicle update for Phasmophobia, available now—free—on Steam, PS5 and PS VR2. This sweeping patch completely overhauls the way you document paranormal activity: a brand-new Sound Recorder and video camera let you capture up to three sound clips and five video clips per investigation, while the in-game journal splits media into Photos, Videos and Sounds tabs for clearer progression. PS VR2 players benefit from foveated rendering, 3D audio and adaptive trigger feedback on the DualSense, making ghost hunts feel more immersive and spine-tingling than ever.
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