Genesis embarks on an emotionally intense VR journey to experience the dramatic milestones in the evolution of earth and mankind. Chaos, rebirth, and catastrophes mark the history of Earth, yet mankind exists. As time travelers we immerse into unknown spheres. Unreal, mystical, and daunting, yet full of breath-taking landscapes and creatures that truly existed. 4.7 bn years of evolution condensed into a 24 h metaphor reveal: We are children of galactic luck, born in the final second of eternity
Cinema Style VR but short. Really good cinema style vr experience but I was expecting something a bit longer than 13minutes but VR cinema is heading in the right direction if this is what's the come. Some eerie scenes too esp undertone water. CGI is amazing. But for £1.49 I'm glad to support the company in the projects all the same. Thanks.
Library of Realities.com review:. Genesis is a 360-degree stereoscopic VR feature that delves into an epic subject in twelve short minutes. By visualizing the history of the Earth as a single day through a sequence of scenes, Genesis covers everything from the formation of the Moon and the Cambrian Explosion to the evolution of mammals into early humans, leading to the present day. Depicting such an extraordinary scope in such a small runtime can never resolve to anything greater than skipping a stone over the surface of Earth's story, yet Genesis accomplishes its goals through big scenes underlined by a broad narrative.
As a spectacle, the visual depth of several scenes left us impressed, and the suitably bombastic and atmospheric musical score adds an excellent layer of immersion. However, we were largely frustrated by two factors. Firstly, rather than being a structured film with a cohesive style, the production felt more like a montage of individual shots that rarely, if ever, utilizes the unique persectives offered by virtual reality.
Our second frustration stemmed from the fact that, although some scenes were well-rendered and graphically detailed, others looked remarkably blurry, as if we were peering through cataracts. Rendering and displaying stereoscopic 360-degree surround video on a device such as the Meta Quest necessarily requires compromises on graphic fidelity, but this doesn't explain how the quality of the video can vary from one scene to the next. We suspect this is partly due to the choice of scenes - a detailed churning ocean looks incredibly fuzzy, but later a static forest scene appears well rendered.
As all the movement and action in Genesis are framed towards the front of the viewing area, we wonder whether a high resolution 180-degree video might be a better compromise to better represent Genesis' visuals.
✅ Epic subject, told with objectivity. ✅ Impressive visual spectacles and immersive soundtrack. ❌ Mixed video quality detracts from enjoyment.