In Time Machine you fly in a sort of amphibious hovercraft that allows you to zoom around the levels. Virtual reality does many things well, including giving the player a sense of scale. Time Machine brings that love to virtual reality with one rather impressive twist: You’ll be interacting with dinosaurs, not lions and tigers. "When I was a child I was addicted to going to the zoo," Caballero said. Minority Media’s first step through that door is a game called Time Machine. "Right now everyone is opening the door," Caballero said. That changed after Facebook’s acquisition of Oculus. "We’re talking to a lot of investors, and I can tell you that a year ago people would think you are crazy ," he said. If you’re interested in rolling the dice on virtual reality, this would seem a good time to do it. It’s going to take television and kick it out the window." It’s going to be the platform of the century. "I believe this technology is going to take over. He claims Minority Media is betting its entire future on virtual reality. saw an opportunity to come back to the technology. It flattened," he explained.īut after the Oculus Rift Development Kit Kickstarter took off, Caballero. ![]() ![]() "I got to experience it in real time with a motion capture system attached to me. is straying from that path for his next game.įor the past 10 years, he's been unable to shake the memory of the first time he tried virtual reality technology. Minority Media is the studio behind reflective indie game Papo & Yo, so it may surprise you just how far creative director Vander Caballero.
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