Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Features

PlayStation VR2 just got 2 fun shooters, but I’m still waiting to be wowed

For the past six months, PlayStation VR2 players like myself have been yearning for new reasons to boot up our headsets. And after a long wait, the VR platform is getting a much-needed infusion with two brand-new titles. It’s a cause for celebration, but a mild one; neither of PSVR2’s latest titles does much to revitalize my shock and awe for the platform six months into its life span.

A powerful enemy appears in Crossfire Sierra Squad.
Smilegate Entertainment / Smilegate Entertainment

The two games in question are the exclusive, Sony-published Firewall Ultra from First Contact Entertainment and Crossfire Sierra Squad from Smilegate. Both are realistic-looking military shooters, although they are different in execution. Firewall Ultra is a Rainbow Six Siege-style, squad-based multiplayer game, while Crossfire Sierra Squad taps more into the genre’s arcade roots to create VR shooting galleries.

Recommended Videos

Both games are fun VR shooters that are emblematic of the strengths and shortcomings of PlayStation VR2 games. They’re both visually impressive, but have some rough edges, lack the depth I could get out of similar console games, and aren’t pushing the boundaries of what a VR game can be. After being a PlayStation VR2 owner for six months, I’m starting to get bored with what’s on offer.

Are Firewall Ultra and Crossfire Sierra Squad good?

Firewall Ultra is a rebuilt version of one of the original PlayStation VR’s most popular multiplayer games, Firewall: Zero Hour. It certainly looks the part, too. Most of the time, it’s the most visually impressive game I’ve played on PlayStation VR2 since Horizon Call of the Mountain, with excellent eye-tracking and foveated rendering that ensure this is one of the most realistic-looking VR games if you’re just looking around whatever environment you’re in. And I was looking around a lot, as Firewall Ultra is an intense tactical shooter.

First person gameplay from Firewall Ultra.
Sony Intreactive Entertainment

Firewall Ultra’s best-of-three matches task players with finding and collecting data from a laptop guarded by another team. The data must be collected, or one of the teams must be completely wiped, for a round to conclude. Tense, crowded maps and quick times for weapons to kill enemies will make this game feel quite familiar to fans of team-based tactical shooters like Rainbow Six Siege. Unfortunately, despite its easy-to-pick-up gameplay and excellent eye-tracking, Firewall Ultra is rougher around the edges than that non-VR game or even other VR shooters like Pavlov.

My experience was glitchy, as I got stuck in grenade animations and struggled to load into a multiplayer match with a friend I was in a party with. Any sense of realism goes away as soon as you see an ally’s limbs unnaturally bend or phase into their body as the Sense controllers track their movement.

First person gameplay from Crossfire Sierra Squad.
Smilegate Entertainment

Meanwhile, Crossfire Sierra Squad is built more for co-op, letting players loose in small arenas that serve as arcade-like shooting galleries for whatever forces are attacking the players in that level.

Crossfire Sierra Squad looks quite slick, matching the visual fidelity of PlayStation 4-era console shooters. Unfortunately, my time with it was plagued by a jitteriness whenever I tried to aim down sights, which I couldn’t tell if I or the game was the cause of. It’s an unambitious VR game too; I got nothing out of Crossfire Sierra Squad that I couldn’t get out of Pavlov or my current favorite VR arcade shooter Zombieland: Headshot Fever Reloaded. As these titles are arriving half a year into the PSVR2’s life span, I was expecting a bit more from them. Unfortunately, I’m still hungry to see where the promising tech can go.

The current pitfalls of the PSVR2 library

Regular PC and console games already have a problem of not knowing what to center their games around other than combat, and that’s an issue that I’ve found to be exacerbated in VR. The tech is filled with first-person shooters, and that wears thin after awhile. Games like Pavlov and Zombieland made a positive impression on me because I played them early on in my time with VR, but each new PSVR2 shooter I try has diminishing returns as they prioritize visuals over unique gameplay.

Firewall Ultra and Crossfire Sierra Squad are both fun for a few missions each, but I doubt I’ll play much more of either in the future, just as I haven’t returned to the roguelite Synapse since reviewing it. The PSVR2 experiences that have stuck with me the most are things like Demeo, Moss, Before Your Eyes, Humanity, or Another Fisherman’s Tale, which do innovative things with the unique perspective that playing in VR provides. Unfortunately, these new PSVR2 games seem more concerned with showing me another way to reload a gun in VR.

A group of players walk up in Crossfire Sierra Squad.
Smilegate Entertainment

A lack of compelling new games — an issue that PSVR2 continually faces — is only worsened when what we get feels so by the numbers. I occasionally enjoy putting on a VR headset to play new or experimental games, but I’m not sticking around in those virtual worlds nearly as much as I had hoped. In such an exhilarating new gaming medium, I’ve been disappointed by the lack of innovation its latest games have shown.

The newest PSVR2 games seem more interested in visual fidelity and doubling down on what VR is known for doing best, but I’m becoming increasingly apathetic toward new VR games like that. That might satiate longtime VR players, but as someone relatively new to the medium and expecting more out of it, I’m disappointed. Looking otoward the horizon, I can only hope that games like The Foglands, Journey to Foundation, and Arizona Sunshine 2 have more inspired takes on what first-person-perspective VR games can be.

Firewall Ultra and Crossfire Sierra Squad are both available now for PlayStation VR2.

Tomas Franzese
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic revealed as a new single-player RPG
Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic

The Game Awards 2025 dropped a massive surprise for Star Wars fans with the reveal of Star Wars: Fate of the Old Republic. It’s a brand-new single-player action RPG set in the fan-favourite Old Republic era. It is headed to PC, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series X|S, though given the timeline, we might see it on whatever consoles come next, too.

The debut trailer, running on Unreal Engine 5, looked incredible and confirmed the feature we all want: the ability to shape your story by choosing between the Light and Dark sides. But the real hype comes from the team building it.

Read more
Rainbow Six Mobile finally gets a global release date and two exclusive maps
Pre-registrations cross 10 million ahead of launch
rainbow-six-mobile-release-date

After years of testing, Ubisoft has finally locked in a release date for Rainbow Six Mobile, and it’s right around the corner. The mobile version of the tactical shooter game is set to launch worldwide on February 23, 2026 for iOS and Android, bringing the core Rainbow Six Siege experience to phones for the first time.

The game has been in development since 2022 and has seen its share of delays that pushed back earlier launch plans. The public tests began in 2023, and Ubisoft has now confirmed that the long wait is almost over.

Read more
Play FIFA on your TV with Netflix, your phone is the controller
Netflix says a newly reimagined FIFA game is coming exclusively to Netflix Games for the FIFA World Cup 2026, with TV play in select countries and your phone handling controls.
Real Madrid's Vinícius Júnior taking on a defender in FIFA 23.

Netflix is bringing FIFA to its games lineup in time for the FIFA World Cup 2026, and it wants the living room to be part of it. The plan is a reimagined FIFA football simulation game, exclusive to Netflix Games, that you can play on your phone and, in some places, on your TV.

If your goal is to play FIFA on Netflix TV, the core idea is simple: you launch the game on a supported TV and use your phone as the controller. Netflix also says you can play solo or online with friends, and it is pitching the experience as quick to learn but satisfying to stick with.

Read more