Make no doubt about it though: Surgeon Simulator: Experience Reality is an inherently flawed and conflicted game that struggles with core fundamentals that a VR game released at the end of 2016 probably shouldn’t struggle with. Grab a scalpel and cut away his organs to get deeper, or carefully maneuver the electric saw to remove those pesky arteries. You can pick up the saw and carve his ribs away one by one, or bash them in with a hammer to reach his insides more quickly. He needs a heart transplant and the tools of destruction are spread out before you. The very first operation has you cutting into Bob, who lay opened up on the table, ready for business. The entire game is played by picking up and using objects. Depending on your sense of humor and expectations, it mostly works. Now, Surgeon Simulator: Experience Reality, is essentially the original 2013 game adapted to fit the controls and premise of the Meet the Medic demo. When the Vive launched, we got Surgeon Simulator VR: Meet the Medic, which was a short demo showing off the basic mechanics. Naturally, once VR headsets hit the market, people wanted to experience it all over again, but this time from the immersive view of a VR headset. It was hilarious and garnered a huge fanbase. A big part of its charm came from the wonky controls, silly premise, and absolutely ridiculous shenanigans that resulted from pairing an extremely serious occupation, such as being a surgeon, with the whimsical nature and dark humor of imprecise video game controls. Surgeon Simulator: Experience Reality from Bossa Studios is a VR-based adaptation of the original Surgeon Simulator 2013, first released for flat monitor displays in 2013. I on the other hand wear goofy VR headsets and bash patients’ heads in with a hammer because it makes me laugh. Blood, guts, and tears sprinkle her floor and clothes while lives literally hang in the balance in her day-to-day occupation. She spends her days wearing scrubs helping doctors deliver babies and perform often complex operation surgeries on all parts of the human body. My wife is an operating room nurse in her actual real life career.
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