The visuals are stunning. Watching the red dust swirl over the Valles Marineris canyon while Jill troubleshoots a failing oxygen regulator is genuinely tense. The scene where Jack takes a "one small step" onto the regolith is beautifully rendered. The writers also nailed the physics – the low-gravity arguments where they float away from each other mid-fight are both hilarious and realistic.
A bumpy ride with a breathtaking view ★★★☆☆ Reviewed by: MarsCurious42 jack and jill mars
The pacing is uneven. The first half is a grueling 45 minutes of orbital mechanics and ration calculations. I get that realism is key, but do I need to watch Jack manually recalibrate the CO₂ scrubber three times? Also, the "fetch a pail of water" payoff is oddly anticlimactic. They find subsurface ice, melt it, and... that’s it. No alien microbes, no twist. Just water. The visuals are stunning
It’s The Martian meets a Saturday morning cartoon. While the dialogue can be clunky ("We’re not on Earth anymore, Jill!"), the sheer terror of a dust storm on the Tharsis Plateau is worth the price of admission. If you like hard sci-fi with a dash of nostalgic weirdness, take the trip. Just don’t expect them to make it back down that hill. 3.5/5 stars. The writers also nailed the physics – the
Jack and Jill went up the hill... to fetch a pail of Martian water. Sounds like a nursery rhyme reboot, right? But the new VR experience takes that classic couple and launches them (literally) into a hard sci-fi survival drama.