
Credit: Polyarc
newsBreaking
Moss: The Forgotten Relic Celebrates Upcoming Launch With Stunning New Trailer
July 16, 2026·3 min read
Moss: The Forgotten Relic has a new launch trailer out, and it gives players a clear look at Quill’s return before the collection arrives on July 16. The big change is simple: one of VR’s most loved fantasy adventures is being rebuilt for players who do not own a headset.
The collection brings together Moss, Moss: Book II, and the Twilight Garden expansion in one non-VR package. It is coming to Steam, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, and Nintendo Switch 2, giving Quill a much larger audience than before.
The trailer sells Quill’s charm first
The new trailer works because it keeps the focus on Quill rather than only showing platform lists or upgraded visuals. She still feels small against the world around her, but her movement, reactions, and courage make the adventure feel warm instead of distant.
That is important because Moss was never only about solving puzzles. The original games stood out because players felt like they were helping Quill through a storybook world, guiding her across danger while also reaching into the environment to move objects and clear paths.
The trailer suggests Polyarc is trying to keep that feeling alive on normal screens. Quill still looks aware of the player, the world still feels handmade, and the quieter moments matter just as much as the action.
Related Article

newsBreaking
Activision’s Latest Call Of Duty Announcement Is Upsetting And Bewildering Fans
Jul 16, 20263 min read
The collection is built for regular screens
Moss: The Forgotten Relic is not being treated like a simple copy of the VR games. Polyarc has reworked the experience with enhanced visuals, new handcrafted cutscenes, and camera changes made for TVs, monitors, and handheld screens.
Those changes are important because the original Moss used VR in a very specific way. Players could look around each space like a tiny stage, lean closer to inspect puzzles, and feel as if Quill’s world was sitting right in front of them.
A normal screen cannot copy that feeling exactly, so the new version has to solve the problem differently. The camera needs to keep puzzles readable, keep Quill close, and make each area feel personal without relying on a headset.
The launch opens the series to more players
The biggest reason for this release is to make the game available to more players. Many players know Moss by reputation, but never played it because it was tied to VR hardware, which remains expensive or inconvenient for a large part of the audience.
Putting the full story on PC and consoles gives the series a second chance with players who enjoy fantasy adventures, puzzle-platformers, and character-driven games. It also makes the collection easier to recommend, because the headset barrier is finally gone.
The package also includes the Twilight Garden expansion and a Skip Combat option, which helps players who want to focus more on puzzles and story. On July 16, Moss: The Forgotten Relic has to prove Quill’s magic still works when players meet her from the couch instead of inside VR.
Tagged In
MossPolyarcQuill