Exclusive: Moscow startup eyes global expansion with free-roam VR experiences
23 Jun 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Anvio VR offers a completely immersive experience and is currently the only company to offer full-body tracking / Anvio VR
Russian virtual reality startup Anvio VR has set its sights on establishing multiple worldwide attractions after launching its debut product, a free-roam multiplayer zombie shooter which tracks the entire human body.
Called City Z, the Oculus Rift-powered experience debuted in Moscow in April.
It uses sensors placed on the hands, feet and back, which interact with infrared cameras, meaning players’ avatars move exactly as they do in real life. The Moscow attraction can comfortably accommodate four players, though Anvio's system can host more.
According to Anvio, the product is currently the only virtual reality system available with full-body tracking.
In City Z players must complete a series of levels, taking out a number of zombies before moving on to the next level as they make their way up a tower block in a post-apocalyptic version of the Russian capital.
Some levels are zombie free and require balancing acts over perceived drops, while others feature a non-stop horde of the undead surging towards players. Others use darkness to incite fear, with sudden zombie attacks coming from the shadows. Players move through a physical arena, with the game designed so they don’t leave its confines, while simultaneously creating the illusion they are exploring an expansive space in an immersive virtual world.
Players can take part for between RUB6000 (US$100, €90, £80) and RUB8000 (US$134, €120, £105) for a 45-minute session of up to four people, with the VR element lasting roughly 30 minutes.
Anvio is now planning to open a second attraction in London. The company is currently seeking a suitable site in the UK capital and partners on the basis of a franchise and licensing model to launch further Anvio attractions worldwide.
While City Z is currently the only game in its library, Anvio is not limiting its product base. A second adventure game in the style of Tomb Raider or Indiana Jones is in the works with additional games in the pipeline.
“We’re strictly doing no guns on this one,” Anvio founder Eldar Iskhakov told Attractions Management.
“At the start you go down into a huge cave, which is essentially like a lost city. There’s a lake at the bottom of this cave where you can see treasure, so you have to traverse it and go all the way down through different puzzles and traps. Environmental elements you already have in City Z, such as walking over narrow planks, is going to be included. We’re going to have dark traps, labyrinths – things like that.”
For more on Anvio VR, check out the next issue of AM2 magazine, available 28 June.
In City Z, players must ascend a destroyed tower block in post-apocalyptic Moscow / Credit: Anvio VR
As players climb the tower they are attacked by zombies, which they must defeat to proceed to the next level / Credit: Anvio VR
Anvio has used one of the leading gaming engines to create the experience, offering an ultra-immersive playground for players / Credit: Anvio VR
The game concludes on the roof with a climactic final boss experience / Credit: Anvio VR
The VR arena covers 200sq m (2,150sq ft) with the game designed so players do not walk into any real-life obstacles / Credit: Anvio VR
A number of sensors on the payer's body tracks movement, meaning players move in game as they do in real life / Credit: Anvio VR
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Exclusive: Moscow startup eyes global expansion with free-roam VR experiences
23 Jun 2017 . BY Tom Anstey
Anvio VR offers a completely immersive experience and is currently the only company to offer full-body tracking / Anvio VR
Russian virtual reality startup Anvio VR has set its sights on establishing multiple worldwide attractions after launching its debut product, a free-roam multiplayer zombie shooter which tracks the entire human body.
Called City Z, the Oculus Rift-powered experience debuted in Moscow in April.
It uses sensors placed on the hands, feet and back, which interact with infrared cameras, meaning players’ avatars move exactly as they do in real life. The Moscow attraction can comfortably accommodate four players, though Anvio's system can host more.
According to Anvio, the product is currently the only virtual reality system available with full-body tracking.
In City Z players must complete a series of levels, taking out a number of zombies before moving on to the next level as they make their way up a tower block in a post-apocalyptic version of the Russian capital.
Some levels are zombie free and require balancing acts over perceived drops, while others feature a non-stop horde of the undead surging towards players. Others use darkness to incite fear, with sudden zombie attacks coming from the shadows. Players move through a physical arena, with the game designed so they don’t leave its confines, while simultaneously creating the illusion they are exploring an expansive space in an immersive virtual world.
Players can take part for between RUB6000 (US$100, €90, £80) and RUB8000 (US$134, €120, £105) for a 45-minute session of up to four people, with the VR element lasting roughly 30 minutes.
Anvio is now planning to open a second attraction in London. The company is currently seeking a suitable site in the UK capital and partners on the basis of a franchise and licensing model to launch further Anvio attractions worldwide.
While City Z is currently the only game in its library, Anvio is not limiting its product base. A second adventure game in the style of Tomb Raider or Indiana Jones is in the works with additional games in the pipeline.
“We’re strictly doing no guns on this one,” Anvio founder Eldar Iskhakov told Attractions Management.
“At the start you go down into a huge cave, which is essentially like a lost city. There’s a lake at the bottom of this cave where you can see treasure, so you have to traverse it and go all the way down through different puzzles and traps. Environmental elements you already have in City Z, such as walking over narrow planks, is going to be included. We’re going to have dark traps, labyrinths – things like that.”
For more on Anvio VR, check out the next issue of AM2 magazine, available 28 June.
In City Z, players must ascend a destroyed tower block in post-apocalyptic Moscow / Credit: Anvio VR
As players climb the tower they are attacked by zombies, which they must defeat to proceed to the next level / Credit: Anvio VR
Anvio has used one of the leading gaming engines to create the experience, offering an ultra-immersive playground for players / Credit: Anvio VR
The game concludes on the roof with a climactic final boss experience / Credit: Anvio VR
The VR arena covers 200sq m (2,150sq ft) with the game designed so players do not walk into any real-life obstacles / Credit: Anvio VR
A number of sensors on the payer's body tracks movement, meaning players move in game as they do in real life / Credit: Anvio VR
The Grand Hall Experience at St Louis Union Station in St Louis, US, has recently undergone
a major upgrade, involving new projection technology, media servers, and new and refreshed
content.
Bespoke play environment design and manufacturer TouchWood Play has announced that it is
responsible for the creation of a new Kids’ Club on Zuhha Island, Dubai.
German rollercoaster designer and manufacturer Maurer Rides is installing what it describes
as the world’s first interactive indoor rollercoaster featuring Spike technology at the new
Hi Space indoor amusement park in Chongqing, China.
A new $25m flying theatre experience has launched near Niagara Falls, New York State,
exploring 13,000 years of Niagara’s geological and cultural history.
Dutch theme park Efteling has launched its transformed Efteling Symphonica water show,
which has been redesigned to bring it into line with the park’s sustainability goals.
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