No more Rainbows
No More Rainbows
Your lava-filled realm used to be perfectly miserable. Now it's full of adorably cute, rainbow-spewing creatures — and there's only one thing to do about it. Use your arms to run, jump, claw and climb in the first VR platformer that truly makes the most of what VR bodies can do. Gorilla Tag-style arm locomotion meets a full-scale platformer campaign: 4 worlds, 28 levels, competitive multiplayer, and a real physical workout. Genre-defining, say the critics. Genuinely exhausting, say the players. Both are right.
No More Rainbows uses arm-based locomotion — you physically swing your arms to run, propel yourself to jump, and claw to climb. This is not a passive experience. Players consistently report genuine physical exertion during sessions, and the multiplayer mode in particular is described as "exhausting." For schools, this is a significant PE/wellbeing dimension that most VR games cannot offer. Set realistic session lengths — 20–30 minutes is typically plenty, especially for first-time players.
What is No More Rainbows?
No More Rainbows is a first-person VR platformer from Squido Studio that does something no major VR platformer had fully committed to before it: it puts you inside the body of the character and asks you to physically move to play. You are The Beast — a gruffly-likeable monster who wakes to discover their once-grim, lava-filled realm has been invaded by an army of absurdly cute, rainbow-spewing creatures. An antagonist — a silently-mocking uber-cutie — escapes through a portal, and the adventure begins.
The movement system is the game's defining innovation: like Gorilla Tag, you locomote by physically swinging your arms — pumping them to run, propelling them downward to jump, and clawing with your hands to climb walls and grab ledges. This is not a controller thumbstick experience. Your body is the input device. The result is a VR platformer that is genuinely physically engaging, deeply immersive, and — according to UploadVR — "genre-defining" for what it proves the medium can do.
Released in June 2023 and continuously updated since — with hand tracking, LIV Camera integration and a Deathmatch multiplayer mode added post-launch — No More Rainbows has accumulated over 3,500 Meta Store reviews and won the NYX Game Awards for Best Experience. It regularly appears in sale discounts to as low as $3.99, making it one of the best value VR experiences available at any price.
What Makes It Special
Curriculum & Educational Fit
No More Rainbows is not primarily a curriculum content tool — it won't teach a subject concept. Its educational value is in physical engagement and active play (genuine exercise through arm locomotion), coordination and timing (the platformer skills that transfer to motor development), and as one of the most engaging VR enrichment and reward experiences available. For Computing, the game is a useful discussion text on locomotion design — how do you make a movement system that feels natural in VR? The Gorilla Tag comparison opens conversations about embodied interaction and game feel. Suitable from age 8 upwards; the premise is cartoon-violent (stomping cute creatures) but entirely age-appropriate.
| Platform | Quest 2/3 · Steam PC VR |
| Price | $19.99 (regular sales) |
| Developer | Squido Studio |
| Released | June 2023 |
| Worlds / Levels | 4 worlds · 28 levels |
| Multiplayer | ✓ Co-op + Deathmatch |
| Hand tracking | ✓ Full support |
| Lives system | ✓ None — retry freely |
| Meta reviews | 3,500+ · 4.4/5 |
| Best for | Active play · PE · Enrichment (8+) |
