A Fishermans Tale Mind-Bending VR Game Now Available

In A Fisherman’s Tale, the mind-bending VR adventure game that launches onto PlayStation VR, HTC Vive, Oculus Rift and Windows Mixed Reality headsets today, you will work with infinite, ever smaller and bigger replications of yourself to find your way out of a world where physics are utterly broken.

What does it mean to be trapped inside a replica in an elusive virtual world? A Fisherman’s Tale is a journey of both introspection and extrospection, asking players to both reach inside and outside of themselves for answers.

In A Fisherman’s Tale, players will:

• Break more than a couple laws of physics in mind-bending VR puzzles!
• Team up with yourself in revolutionary multi-dimensional single player co-op!
• Meet some of the quirkiest sidekicks to have ever set foot in a VR game
• Use your hands to pick up, throw, combine, and use all kinds of things in glorious fully immersive virtual reality!
• Toy around with your tiny little model lighthouse, inside a lighthouse, inside a… is that another lighthouse?
• Uncover the truth at the core of an unusually tall tale, exclusively in VR

A Fisherman’s Tale is now available at a SRP of $14.99 for PlayStation VR, HTC VIVE, Oculus Rift and Windows Mixed Reality. To celebrate, a 15 percent launch discount is offered during launch week.

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Picture of John Breeden II
John Breeden II
As a journalist John has covered everything from rural town meetings to the U.S. Congress and even done time as a crime reporter and photographer.|His first venture into writing about the game industry came in the form of a computer column called "On the Chip Side," which grew to have over 1 million circulation and was published in newspapers in several states. From there he did several "ask the computer guy" columns in magazines such as Up Front! in New Mexico and Who Cares? in Washington D.C. When the Internet started to become popular, he began writing guided Web tours for the newly launched Washington Post online section as well as reviews for the weekend section of the paper, something he still does from time to time. His experience in trade publications came as a writer and reviewer for Government Computer News. As the editor of GiN, he demands strict editorial standards from all the writers and reviewers. Breeden feels the industry needs a weekly, reliable trade publication covering the games industry and works tirelessly to accomplish that goal.