4 June 2026
So, you’ve strapped on your VR headset and stepped into virtual worlds filled with dragons, aliens, and faraway galaxies. Maybe you’ve swung lightsabers, shot zombies, or even painted in 3D space. But are you really a VR veteran until you've played the truly bizarre stuff?
Let’s be real—Virtual Reality is already weird. You’re literally standing in your living room with bulky goggles on, flailing around like a maniac. But some game developers have taken VR weirdness to a whole new level. Think beyond sci-fi shooters and fantasy epics—we’re talking about games so strange, so off-the-wall, that you’ll laugh, scratch your head, and maybe even question your sanity.
Ready to dive into the rabbit hole? Grab your motion controllers because here are the strangest VR games you’ll ever play.

The moment you boot up Accounting+, you know you’re in for something utterly bonkers. Created by Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland and game dev genius William Pugh, this VR experience escalates quickly from pencil-pushing accountant simulator to dimension-hopping chaos.
Imagine starting your day balancing books, and fifteen minutes later, you’re being screamed at by a gang of foul-mouthed tree dwellers. Sound confusing? Well, it is. And that’s the point.
Now here’s the thing: Job Simulator sounds like the driest concept in gaming history. Who wants to simulate nine-to-five life in a virtual world? But stay with me—this game is anything but ordinary.
In an AI-dominated future where humans no longer need to work (finally!), robots have created a museum to teach people what jobs used to be like. You get to "simulate" tasks like making coffee, fixing cars, and photocopying donuts. Yes, donuts.

Another brainchild of Justin Roiland, Trover Saves the Universe throws you into a colorful world of talking alien babies, eyeholes, and cosmic nonsense. You control Trover, a purple dude with babies jammed in his eye sockets (yes, really), and together, you’re on a mission to stop an evil overlord from… well, let’s just say it gets wild.
Let's just say if VR had an Inception-style equivalent, it’d be Virtual Virtual Reality. The game is set in a future where humans have been replaced by AI clients, and you now serve them in various surreal virtual environments. But here’s the kicker—somewhere along the way, you realize not all is as it seems.
The Under Presents isn’t just a game—it’s a performance, an art piece, and an interactive theatre rolled into one surreal experience. You’ll find yourself in a surreal world where time loops, live actors interact with you in real-time, and the laws of physics are more like suggestions.
At first glance, GORN looks like a comically over-the-top gladiator brawler. But then you realize something—everything is squishy, stretchy, and hilariously violent. Limbs flop around like rubber chickens, weapons stick into bodies like you’re playing with Play-Doh, and your enemies come at you like they’ve been drinking heavily.
You’ve probably played shooters in VR—but have you ever caught bullets with FROG HANDS?
Yep. That’s the concept behind this wonderfully oddball game. You have amphibian arms, and you use your sticky frog tongues (yes, from your fingers) to catch bullets in midair. There's no plot, no logic—just frog stuff. Go with it.
This game lets you be… well, everything. A tree. A goat. A particle of dust. A galaxy. Why? Because why not.
Everything isn’t a traditional game. It’s more of an interactive philosophy simulator. You shift from objects to organisms to massive cosmic entities, all while pondering the interconnectedness of existence. Heady stuff.
Don’t let the dainty name fool you—Tea For God is a sci-fi shooter with a twist that’ll melt your brain. It uses non-Euclidean geometry to generate endless corridors that perfectly fit your physical play space. Even a tiny room feels gigantic inside the game.
Yes, the same folks who gave us Dark Souls made an eerie VR game called Déraciné, and yes, it’s as strange as it sounds. You play a ghostly faerie in a boarding school trapped in a moment in time. You explore, find clues, and manipulate time to affect the past and future.
VR is still a wild frontier. It’s the perfect playground for bizarre ideas that just wouldn't work in traditional formats. In VR, you're not just watching the weirdness—you’re inside it.
These games remind us that gaming doesn’t always have to be about winning or leveling up. Sometimes, it’s about catching bullets with frog fingers, being a refrigerator, or laughing at an eyeball baby.
And honestly? That’s the kind of madness we need sometimes.
So go ahead—embrace the weird. Get lost in talking trees, eyeholes, quantum corridors, and philosophical pigs. Because if you’re going to escape reality, you might as well go all in.
all images in this post were generated using AI tools
Category:
Virtual Reality GamesAuthor:
Lucy Ross