Blade And - Sorcery Update 12.3
The headline feature of Update 12.3 is the significant overhaul to the Crystal Hunt mode. Previously a promising but sometimes repetitive rogue-lite dungeon crawler, it now breathes with genuine tension. Enemy spawns have been reworked to feel less like a checklist and more like an ambush. New environmental hazards—think pressure plates, crumbling bridges, and magical traps that trigger mid-swing—force you to keep your head on a swivel.
Blade and Sorcery Update 12.3 isn’t a revolution. It doesn’t add dragons or story cutscenes or multiplayer. What it does is far more difficult: it polishes a raw gem into something that feels finished . Combat flows better. Exploration matters. Magic crackles with new purpose. And when you behead a heavily armored knight with a rusty falchion, then turn just in time to deflect a fireball with your wrist-mounted shield, you’ll realize—this is the closest VR has come to feeling like a real action hero. Blade and Sorcery Update 12.3
On the technical side, WarpFrog quietly optimized the game’s CPU usage during large enemy spawns. That means less frame drop when you’re facing six enemies in the Colosseum. For Quest 2 and lower-end PCVR users, this is a godsend. Modders have already begun updating their most popular overhauls—the Medieval Mega Pack, the Outer Rim lightsabers—and early reports suggest the new scripting hooks in 12.3 allow for more stable, less crash-prone modded runs. The headline feature of Update 12
Let’s talk about the hands. Update 12.3 introduces subtle but game-changing improvements to hand posing and grip physics. In previous builds, grabbing a dagger off your hip could feel like fumbling for keys in the dark. Now, there’s a predictive magnetism that respects your intent without robbing you of agency. Two-handed weapon handling is smoother, with less “virtual drift” when you swing a maul. Polearms, notoriously finicky in VR, finally feel like proper reach weapons instead of jittery broomsticks. What it does is far more difficult: it