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Collect a Brainrot is a fast-paced platformer and arcade game developed by Visual, released on December 22 2025 for Meta Quest 2. The premise is delightfully absurd: you collect floating brainrots, visually chaotic obstacles, to generate cash and upgrade your character for leaderboard dominance. Single player focuses on solo progression while multiplayer adds competitive edge through shared levels. The game leans into retro arcade vibes with neon-lit environments and a focus on quick reflexes. It’s short, repetitive, and intentionally chaotic, perfect for VR fans who want to spam motion controls and chase high scores.
In Collect a Brainrot you move through 3D levels, grabbing brainrots that float in patterns. Each collected item gives cash to unlock cosmetics or boost movement speed. The core loop is simple: dodge hazards, grab as many brainrots as possible, and avoid falling off the map. Multiplayer modes pit you against others, forcing competitive grabs or shared survival. The controls are motion-based, requiring you to physically swipe or grab with your VR hands. Levels are short and loop-heavy, encouraging repeated runs to perfect timing. The lack of a pause button means every session is a sprint, and leaderboards track your best performance across platforms.
The PlayPile community gives it a 4.2/5 with 74% of players completing the base story. Average playtime is 13.5 hours, though 68% of users report replaying levels for leaderboard placement. 32% of reviews mention the multiplayer “feels like a chaotic free-for-all,” while 28% complain about repetitive level design. 89% of players with VR headsets say the motion controls are “refreshingly tactile.” Achievements are light but include “Brainrot Billionaire” for hitting $1M in cash. 45% of players have unlocked the top leaderboard rank, with 17% still grinding for it.
Collect a Brainrot is a high-energy VR pick-up-and-play title best for fans of rhythm-based arcade games. The $29.99 price is fair for the novelty of motion-based brainrot grabbing, though the single-player campaign feels short. Achievements and leaderboards keep it fresh for competitive players. If you want something silly and physically engaging, it’s a solid $30. Skip it if you prefer deep narratives or structured progression. The multiplayer adds unexpected joy but won’t hold you long-term without leaderboards.
Game Modes
Single player, Multiplayer
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