‘Unseen Diplomacy’ Uses Every Inch of Your Room-Scale VR Space

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Triangular Pixel’s Unseen Diplomacy is an ambitious virtual reality obstacle course set in a world of spies and subterfuge. The new title for the HTC Vive really invests in the concept of room-scale VR by having you walking and crawling around environments cleverly designed to sit snugly within your play space and uses clever tricks to make you think you’re moving beyond it.

Ever fantasize about storming the underground lair of an evil genius who’s hell bent on taking over the world? Unseen Diplomacy assumes you have and gives you the opportunity to act that fantasy out in virtual reality.

Using the HTC Vive’s room-scale capabilities, the title from British developers Triangular Pixels, casts you as a member of an elite force, The British Espionage Tactical Initiative, whose mission is to take down evil covertly.

The game sees your working through multiple rooms connected by ducts, corridors and elevators, all cleverly assembled to fool the mind into thinking it’s occupying a space much larger than it actually is. Gameplay revolves around solving puzzles or performing a range of physical actions in each of the interconnected spaces in order for you to proceed.

These 1:1 actions range from unscrewing vent covers in order to gain access to the next crawl space, or opening draws to find key-cards all the way to more complex, multi-action events. So, you might be required to dodge laser traps for example or move rapidly between computer terminals, mashing the keys Hollywood hacker style to in order to hack the mainframe’.

A neat twist is that a second, seated player can also join you by donning an Oculus Rift headset – allowing them to visually scout the areas and offer verbal assistance and perhaps a little moral support.

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The game is actually designed to be exhibited at events which could accommodate the space required to do it justice. Unseen Diplomacy made its debut in October of last year at the GameCity festival in Nottingham, UK and made quite an impression.

The title was put together by the duo behind Triangular Pixels, Katie Goode and John Campbell who are currently hard at work on their next title, Smash Hit Plunder for the Gear VR – a title with the simple yet appealing premise of “explore and wreck a dungeon, looking for as much treasure as possible.”

Static images courtesy of GameCity Festival

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Based in the UK, Paul has been immersed in interactive entertainment for the best part of 27 years and has followed advances in gaming with a passionate fervour. His obsession with graphical fidelity over the years has had him branded a ‘graphics whore’ (which he views as the highest compliment) more than once and he holds a particular candle for the dream of the ultimate immersive gaming experience. Having followed and been disappointed by the original VR explosion of the 90s, he then founded RiftVR.com to follow the new and exciting prospect of the rebirth of VR in products like the Oculus Rift. Paul joined forces with Ben to help build the new Road to VR in preparation for what he sees as VR’s coming of age over the next few years.
  • Cl

    This looks pretty awesome. I notice the left handed screws on the vents though. I’d probably be stuck there not being able to open the vents.

  • Badelhas

    Awesome!

  • Niko Rautiainen

    game looks cool but its far from normal jumping and crawling at home, looks ridiculous :D maybe if you are a super nerd living alone in a dark room.

    • SnazzyD

      It looks incredibly immersive, but if you’re the angsty type who is worried about what you look like in the comfort of your own home, then I suggest you pass….

    • VR Geek

      I just do not understand why some people are concerned with how they look in VR? I let my VR freak flag fly all the time and am proud of it. Those who judge are not my type of people in the first place.

  • flarn2006

    > The game is actually designed to be exhibited at events which could accommodate the space required to do it justice.

    They’d better not forget about people who have enough space at home and want to play it on their own time.

    EDIT: Aaand I checked the website and it doesn’t look like they have any interest in doing a regular retail release. Which sucks. They don’t even say why. Let’s all hope that if they don’t change their mind, somehow the software gets leaked all over the Internet so anyone can play at home.

    • VR Geek

      Maybe they are planning to open a VR Arcade with it?

  • Kai2591

    Quite cool!

  • Mateusz

    Yeah just a demo, even if leaked it will still be only a demo :(