The Merc with a Mouth has finally arrived in VR — and in the most Deadpool way possible. Marvel's Deadpool VR launched on November 18, 2025 exclusively for Meta Quest 3 and Quest 3S, developed by Twisted Pixel Games and published by Oculus Studios. With a 76/100 Metacritic score and an 8/10 from IGN, it's already one of the standout VR superhero games of the year. Let's break down why.
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The Story: Welcome to Mojo World
Things kick off when Deadpool, mid-fight with Flag-Smasher, tumbles through a portal into Mojo World. There, he's greeted by Mojo — the alien media mogul who rules a dimension built on reality shows — who recruits him to kidnap top-tier villains (Lady Deathstrike, Mephisto, Omega Red, Ultimo) for his latest broadcast.
The script was penned by Joe Kelly — one of the most beloved Deadpool writers in comics history — alongside Michael Anthony Steele, Matt Entin, Ed Kuehnel, and Josh Bear. The story is original, packed with fourth wall breaks (Deadpool talks directly to the player, comments on menus, questions the tutorial instructions), and delivers the signature meta humor that makes the character so unique. If you're a fan of the comics or the Ryan Reynolds films, you'll feel right at home.
Gameplay: Katanas, Guns & Severed Limbs
Marvel's Deadpool VR is a first-person hack and slash — you see everything through Deadpool's eyes. Your default loadout is a pair of katanas and a pair of handguns, but as you progress you unlock increasingly absurd tools of destruction: the "Mojonir" (a parody of Thor's hammer), a sniper rifle that shoots tiny humans, and much more. Weapons can even be thrown at enemies — because Deadpool doesn't play by anyone's rules.
Movement feels impressively fluid: parkour with wall-running, sliding, double-jumping, and a grappling hook that lets you reach distant points or yank enemies toward you. The sense of speed is reminiscent of Spider-Man in VR — except here you're chopping heads instead of slinging webs.
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One truly unique mechanic: during combat, Deadpool can lose an arm or a leg. Thanks to his healing factor, it slowly regenerates — but in the meantime, you can use the severed limb as a weapon against enemies. According to IGN's Gabriel Moss, this creates "many memorable combat encounters and scenarios unique to each player."
Cast: Neil Patrick Harris as Deadpool
The biggest casting surprise was Neil Patrick Harris in the lead role. Harris — known for How I Met Your Mother, Doogie Howser, and hosting the Tony Awards — delivers a performance that's simultaneously funny, sarcastic, and unpredictable. Ryan Reynolds himself, who plays Deadpool in the films, posted an “over-reaction” video on YouTube promoting the game — a gesture that speaks to Marvel's confidence in the project.
Mojo is voiced by John Leguizamo — revealed at Gamescom in August 2025 — and his performance adds even more unhinged energy to the already chaotic game world. Director Daniel Bullock led a team that spent over three years developing the game in close collaboration with Marvel Games.
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Scores & Reviews
Deadpool VR has received “generally favorable” reviews:
Metacritic: 76/100 — “Generally Favorable Reviews”
IGN: 8/10 — "The most complete and entertaining VR superhero experience since Batman: Arkham Shadow"
Game Informer: 7.75/10 — “Strong understanding of the character, even if some jokes don't land”
Kyle Hilliard at Game Informer noted that Twisted Pixel "demonstrated a strong understanding of the character," though he conceded that "some jokes didn't land." On the flip side, he praised the gunplay, boss fights, and overall combat, while finding the level design monotonous in stretches. Gabriel Moss at IGN was more enthusiastic, calling it the best VR superhero game since Arkham Shadow — particularly thanks to its replayability, as you can replay the entire game as different Deadpool variants with slightly altered dialogue.
Awards & Nominations
The game has earned notable nominations across three different award ceremonies:
• The Game Awards 2025: Nominated for Best VR/AR Game
• 15th New York Game Awards (2026): Nominated for the Coney Island Dreamland Award (Best AR/VR Game)
• 29th Annual D.I.C.E. Awards (2026): Two nominations — Immersive Reality Game of the Year and Immersive Reality Technical Achievement
Sadly, the story behind the game's creation has a darker chapter: in January 2026, Meta announced the closure of both Twisted Pixel Games and Sanzaru Games as part of broader layoffs at its Reality Labs division. Deadpool VR turned out to be the final game Twisted Pixel ever developed — a bittersweet ending for a studio that also gave us 'Splosion Man and LocoCycle.
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How It Stacks Up Against Other Marvel VR Games
Deadpool VR isn't the first Marvel VR game. Marvel's Iron Man VR (Camouflaj, 2020) for PSVR/Quest earned a Metacritic 73/100, with IGN giving it 7/10 and Game Informer 7.5/10. It was an aerial shooter — you flew around as Iron Man using repulsors. And Batman: Arkham Shadow (technically DC, but worth the comparison) set an incredibly high bar for superhero VR. Deadpool VR manages to stand alongside these titles — and in certain areas (humor, replayability, combat variety) it surpasses them.
The truth is that the VR superhero market remains small but exceptionally high-quality. Between Arkham Shadow, Iron Man VR, and now Deadpool VR, Quest 3 owners have three wildly different experiences to choose from: strategic stealth, aerial shooting, and balls-to-the-wall hack and slash.
"Marvel's Deadpool VR is the most complete and entertaining VR superhero experience since Batman: Arkham Shadow."
— Gabriel Moss, IGN (November 2025)Is It Worth It? Our Final Verdict
If you're a Deadpool fan — comics, movies, or both — then absolutely yes. Neil Patrick Harris delivers a memorable performance, the combat is fluid and inventive, and the humor (despite some misses) keeps the bar high. The replay value is significant thanks to the Deadpool variants. If you're looking for a VR game that refuses to take itself seriously while still offering genuine melee combat depth, this is it.
If you don't vibe with the humor — or if you're hoping for a deep story-driven experience like Arkham Shadow — you might come away slightly disappointed. The levels can grow repetitive, and certain jokes may wear thin. But for what it promises — pure Deadpool chaos in VR — it delivers almost perfectly.
