Epilogue is the conclusion of a three-part psychological atmospheric trilogy detailing a complex life of a stranger with a hat growing up and living in difficult and strange post-war Soviet member-states.

  • RobertWK’s Review: It’s difficult to condense what Epilogue, Chapter 2 is without a frame of reference about the previous installments of the series (Part 1, Organism is here and Part 2, Epilogue Chapter 1 is here). All three parts together tell an intense personal story about struggle and existence through abstract artistic environments that contain at minimum elements of paranoia, surveillance, substance use, growing up, torture, propaganda, fascism, and despair. The world elements are metaphorical and require artistic interpretation to put together a perception of what the full story might be. The world is non-linear and liminal, even when there are parts that appear straight forward and less phantasmagorical. This installment, Chapter 2, is the conclusion of the story and is the most concrete (though that is an overstatement.) If you’re into worlds with incredible amounts of art and detail, then check out all three Organism stories. The worlds are meant to be experienced through exploration; physical interactivity is low, but the sheer volume of physical abstraction is enough to keep those interested in surrealism plenty busy. (Rating: 9)
  • Katchy’s Review: DrMorro has done it again with the third and supposedly final chapter of the Organism series. Epilogue Chapter 2 goes back to the familiar setting of the last world but after time has passed and much of the world is in decay. Exploring in this one felt even more interesting because everywhere you go it feels like there’s another completely new area to discover. The whole world just reminds me of being in the dreams of someone who lived in 70s/80s Russia and all social and political movements that were going on at the time. There are definitely some nods to Big Brother and other dystopian media, and it’s just so packed full of little things to discover and wonder what the meaning behind it might be. This is the kind of world that makes VR worth investing in. (Rating: 9.5)


  • (Author: DrMorro) (PCVR/Quest:PCVR) (Last Updated: 05/24/2023)

    Average Rating: 9.3

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