Payday 2 VR Review and Setup Guide

Payday 2 is part stealth game and part horde shooter, centered around letting you live a life of crime by executing various heists and robberies.

It’s a very unique premise for a horde shooter, and one that has made Payday 2 a popular game, coupled with its excellent and varied mechanics, wide ranging choice of equipment loadouts, and massive replayability.

Of course, if you’re here then you’ve probably heard that Payday 2 has released a free DLC that allows anyone who owns the game to play it in Virtual Reality. Very exciting stuff, this isn’t another VR mod that may or may not function or convert all of the features of the game to Virtual Reality.

Nope, Payday 2 VR is actually a very well realized conversion of the flatscreen Payday 2 experience into Virtual Reality that unlike some other official VR ports has clearly been seen through to completion. However, that doesn’t mean this is a perfect conversion.

So if you want to know more then keep reading this Payday 2 VR Review, and a brief bit at the end where I’ll give you a little guidance on running Payday 2 VR for yourself.

What You Do In Payday 2 VR

Payday 2 has a lot of shootouts

First, let’s get caught up on what this game is about. If you’re already a Payday 2 veteran on the flatscreen and are familiar with the game, feel free to skip to the next section where I get more specific on how well this game works in Virtual Reality.

So what do you do in Payday 2 VR? Well, it’s a heisting game, where you and three other players or AI bots form a team of criminals that undertake missions in a variety of urban locations ranging from night clubs to banks to jewelry stores.

The first thing you can do is case the joint. Walk around, avoid the notice of security guards, and if you can do it use stealth to steal what you’re there to steal and bring it back to your van without being noticed.

The stealthy approach often won’t work out, so you’ll have to put your mask on and “go loud.” This means a gunfight with whatever security is on the premises and waves of police that show up on the scene to stop you.

The action of Payday 2 is very in your face in Virtual Reality

Going loud is what makes the real meat of Payday 2. You’ll have to use whatever weapons and equipment are in your loadout to outsmart the cops and bring the loot to your getaway vehicle.

You’ve got a very impressive amount of health, but if you still take enough bullets to be brought down your teammates can help you back up, at least a few times. So a lot of the gameplay of Payday 2 VR comes down to shooting.

There are so many police after you in this game that they definitely qualify as a horde, and working together as a team (or solo with bots) to hold them off for long enough to get out with the goods is the core of the game unless you pull off a stealthy robbery.

How Payday 2 Translates To Virtual Reality

So now that you know what Payday 2 is all about, how well does it translate to VR?

Surprisingly well. The developers did a very good job in adding VR hand tracked touch controls to the game, and making all of the controls necessary to play Payday 2 easily navigatable and useful in Virtual Reality.

Payday 2 VR’s controls are very smooth and well put together

Your VR hands are exactly as you would expect them to be, the gloved hands of your chosen criminal, and your hands closely and smoothly track the physical location of your VR touch controllers with no lag.

Your left hand is for interacting with the world by doing things like picking up objectives, using items, and activating objectives. Meanwhile, your right hand is centered around weaponry. It holds your weapon, and pressing the trigger on that hand fires it. Luckily for left handed VR gamers, you can also reverse these hands in the settings menu, or by simply taking your weapon off of your belt with your left hand instead of your right.

That’s right you have a belt of sorts, though it’s made up of icons instead of the actual items you’d pick up, and on it you can switch between your primary and secondary weapons, select equipment to use, and basically access all of the items you normally would need to access in a game of Payday 2.

The belt that holds your items is very convenient in VR Payday 2

This utility belt might not be the most immersive but it definitely gets the job done and lets you access your items cleanly and easily by just grabbing them out of the air in front of your waist, and it can even be adjusted for comfort.

Speaking of comfort, the default movement style used by Payday 2 VR is teleportation movement, likely because this is the type of movement least likely to cause motion sickness in VR. Your off (default left) hand will have a cursor coming out of it that ends in a blue circle on the ground. Then you hold your right thumbstick forward to teleport to the circle.

Teleportation movement is very antiquated, though if you want to use that it is perfectly serviceable in Payday 2 VR, though most will probably want to switch the movement mode to the usual slide movement in the VR options menu (called “direct” there).

Using slide movement is recommended unless you get very bad motion sickness, and you can still do some limited teleporting as a “dash” move using the same cursor, though constantly seeing that cursor and circle coming out of your left hand does add some clutter to the world.

Also, you can’t set your movement direction to follow the direction your headset is facing. Instead, you must slide move in the direction that your offhand is facing, which is a very odd choice to not have in a modern VR game.

Changing the movement mode to slide (aka direct) movement in Payday 2 VR

The controls and interface are generally great for a VR mode integrated into a flatscreen game, but there are a few downsides. For instance, a lot of interactions are mapped to your weapon hand’s thumbstick, like throwing throwables (such as grenades) or changing the fire mode on your weapon.

It’s a lot of clutter to have on a single thumbstick, so using it in the heat of combat is confusing and often frustrating when you select the wrong option. Also, some interactions, such as climbing ladders, are a little strange. When climbing a ladder you get on the ladder not by hovering over it with your left hand and pressing grip as you would to interact with any other object, but by pushing in the left thumbstick. Then to climb up you keep pushing the left thumbstick.

Also, you can only snap turn your character by pressing the A or X buttons. So this Virtual Reality port does show its age in some ways, but also tries to fit a lot of inputs in the small number of buttons provided by a VR controller.

Luckily most objects in Payday 2 VR are more straightforward, and once you learn how to use them the few that are strange, like ladders, are easy to get used to.

Otherwise, the only difficulties that VR adds to the game are the occasional clipping issues, which will make your screen go black until you get back into a valid position, for instance when you walk into a wall at an add angle or inside of an NPC or player. These are sometimes quite annoying, but are generally avoidable.

After some time playing the game, I did experience one crash, but they were not common.

The Fun of Virtual Reality Payday 2

So VR Payday 2 controls well, and despite a few issues is generally easy to learn and use. So does Virtual Reality make the experience of pulling off the ultimate heist better?

Of course it does! Payday 2 is a first person shooter at heart, and boy do first person shooters translate well to VR. The action is all the more in your face in Virtual Reality, and the ability to freely turn and look using your actual body and head serves to put you into the shoes of your character so much more than just moving a mouse to look around.

Check out the carnage!

The same goes for the hand controls that I’ve already told you are pretty well implemented and smooth.

Aiming by looking down the actual sights of your weapon and shooting with your actual hands is a ton more fun in VR than just clicking on a screen, though as I’ve mentioned the implementation is not perfect.

There are no manual reloads in Payday 2 VR, you reload automatically by just clicking a button, and while you can grip a weapon in both hands in this game the hands don’t have special positions for grabbing each individual weapon, so they just sort of hover near the grab point.

The biggest downside to the action in Virtual Reality Payday 2 is that the weapons lack punch and feel a bit weak.

You’re actually just as well off aiming a two handed weapon like a rifle, or even a pistol, with just a single hand. The weapons don’t feel very impactful while you’re firing them and sort of come across more as airsoft guns than actual weapons.

Still the automatic reloads and lack of recoil on the weapons probably serve to not make playing Payday 2 in VR significantly easier or harder than playing it on a flat screen. That’s because there is crossplay when playing Payday 2 VR, you can play with other VR gamers, or with players on the flat screen. This is great because it makes it easy to find a match, and the pool of players to play the game with is not restricted.

The action is more in your face, and if you’d rather aim with your real hands than with a mouse, you’ll find a lot to love in the action of Payday 2 VR. Compared to the original game, and compared to other VR games, it is a fantastic heist inspired VR shooter.

Anyway now that I’ve told you that Payday 2 VR is a ton of fun in this review, despite a few setbacks, let’s talk about how to play it if you’re interseted.

How To Play Payday 2 VR

Just like the base game of Payday 2, the VR DLC can be found on Steam.

It is a completely free DLC for the base game, and it should be automatically added to your account if you own a copy of Payday 2. Just to make sure though, visit the page and make sure the DLC is added to your account.

The Payday 2 VR DLC store page.

Now you can launch and play Payday 2 VR just like any other Virtual Reality game that you would play through Steam. There are a number of ways to do this. If you’re accustomed to playing Steam VR games on your VR headset then it’s as easy as plugging your headset in and launching Payday 2 from your Steam VR library as you would any other game.

If you’re using a Meta Quest 2 or Meta Quest 3 headset then you might be wondering how to play Steam VR games on your headset. The easiest way is with Steam Link. Though as always you’ll have the smoothest experience if you are running the game on a PC that is connected to a 5 GHz network and wired to your router with an ethernet cable.

You can also run Payday 2 VR like any other Steam PCVR game by using Oculus Airlink. This method is a little more difficult to set up but can be used when connected to your PC with a link cable if your WiFi setup isn’t sufficient for streaming the game wirelessly.

So that’s how to play Payday 2 in VR! Once you start the game the intro video should start playing in front of you on the projector in the main menu room.

The intro movie you see when starting up VR Payday 2.

However you choose to play Payday 2 in Virtual Reality, enjoy!

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