Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

‘Skyrim VR’ will launch in November, followed by ‘Doom VFR’ and ‘Fallout 4 VR’

Add as a preferred source on Google

Just before the start of Quakecon later this week, Bethesda has confirmed the release dates of three of its most hotly anticipated virtual reality ports. Skyrim VR will debut on the PlayStation VR headset in November, while Doom VFR and Fallout 4 VR will become available on the HTC Vive in early and mid-December.

One of the sticking points for a lot of people with virtual reality is that there isn’t much in the way of AAA titles on any headset. While that’s debatable, the introduction of three of Bethesda’s biggest games from the last decade could go a long way to scratching that high-end itch.

Recommended Videos

We don’t have long to wait for them, either. Skyrim VR is the first to arrive, set to debut on November 17 on the PSVR. Although releasing on the PlayStation platform initially, Bethesda has said that it will bring it to other headsets in the future. That seems unlikely to happen this year though, so PSVR users will be the first, and for some time only, Skyrim VR inhabitants.

They’ll also get to try out Doom VFR when it debuts on December 1, though that game will also launch on the HTC Vive at the same time. Continuing its seemingly arbitrary manner of splitting its games across different platforms, Bethesda will release Fallout 4 VR less than two weeks later on December 12, but that will be a Vive exclusive at launch.

Although the virtual reality version of Fallout 4 may show up on the PSVR or other platforms in the future, it won’t happen immediately. HTC confirmed it as an ‘exclusive’ in a tweet following this news. That seems somewhat surprising considering HTC’s previous stance on exclusives was much less accepting of the practice.

A noticeable absence from all of these games’ launch platforms though is the Oculus Rift. Arguably still the most recognized name in virtual reality, it would make sense to release such big games on all of the main VR platforms. While Bethesda has said it plans to support as many headsets as possible, it’s also plausible that, due to the legal squabbles between Bethesda’s parent company, Zenimax, and Oculus VR, that these games won’t end up making it to the Rift in an official capacity.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Apple unveils macOS 27 Golden Gate with standalone Siri AI app and smarter Apple Intelligence features
Spotlight search is apparently graduating into a full-time AI assistant now
macOS 27 Golden Gate

Apple has officially previewed macOS 27 Golden Gate at WWDC 2026, introducing one of the biggest AI-focused updates to the Mac in years. The upcoming operating system brings a dedicated Siri AI app, expanded Apple Intelligence features, redesigned Liquid Glass visuals, and deeper integration across apps like Spotlight, Mail, Photos, and Messages.

The company says macOS 27 Golden Gate will launch publicly later this fall, while the first developer beta is already available. A public beta is expected to roll out in July. One of the biggest additions is the new standalone Siri AI app for Mac. According to Apple, the upgraded Siri experience is designed for more conversational and open-ended interactions instead of simple voice commands. Users will be able to ask follow-up questions, reference personal information stored across apps, and interact with on-screen content more naturally.

Read more
iPadOS 27 brings a smarter Siri, permanent Menu Bar, and iPhone app resizing to your iPad
iPadOS 27 follows one of the most ambitious iPad updates in years with something quieter but arguably more useful.
Computer, Electronics, Tablet Computer

iPadOS 26 was Apple's most ambitious iPad update in years. It was a sweeping productivity overhaul that redesigned multitasking and made the iPad feel closer to a laptop replacement. 

iPadOS 27, announced at WWDC 2026, takes a different approach. This one is more about doing the existing things better and faster, along with a few notable upgrades. 

Read more
Apple announces iOS 27 with speedy app launches, Siri AI, and Liquid Glass refinements for your iPhone
The performance improvements are real, the search rebuild is overdue, and the fact that it runs on every iPhone 11 and newer means almost nobody gets left behind.
Electronics, Computer, Mobile Phone

Apple announced iOS 27 at WWDC 2026, and the message this year is quite simple: this one is faster, more polished, and comes loaded with new Apple Intelligence features, including the new Siri AI. It isn’t the most visually dramatic update, but it addresses some of the most frustrating aspects of using iOS. 

The headline performance numbers, if you ask me, are significant. With iOS 27, Apple claims 30% faster app launches, 80% faster AirDrop transfers (something that I’m personally quite excited about), and enhanced responsiveness for older iPhones. Clearly, the ‘Snow Leopard’ style upgrade is fixing all the underlying plumbing, but there’s more to it than just refinement. 

Read more