Looking for virtual reality near Richmond? Here are the real VR spots worth the drive, from wireless free-roam arenas and VR laser tag to escape rooms and family-friendly arcades. Each one below shows what it is best for, where to find it, and what it costs, with a map link so you can check hours and get directions. For the full breakdown with games, ages, and birthday details, read our Best VR in Richmond guide.
Note, if you’re looking for other cities, click here!
VR spots near Richmond, at a glance
Virtual Reality Near Richmond
The VR places near Richmond, one by one
- Pelagos VR (Regency Square) — Free-roam plus escape rooms. Bistro-and-bar immersive hub. Price: From $36 per person.
- Sandbox VR (Short Pump) — Full-body haptic groups. Cinematic, high production. Price: Session pricing, check site.
- Zero Latency (Short Pump) — Untethered arena battles. Warehouse-scale free-roam. Price: Session pricing, check site.
- VR64 Arcade (Williamsburg) — Variety, families (day trip). 100+ game local arcade. Price: Per-session, check site.
- Dream Machine VR (Williamsburg) — Casual multiplayer (day trip). Neighborhood VR spot. Price: Per-session, check site.
Want the deep dive, including which games suit which ages and how birthday bookings work? Read the full Best VR in Richmond guide.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best VR arcade in Richmond?
For the most variety in one place, Pelagos VR at Regency Square, which combines free-roam, a haptic arena, and nine escape rooms with a bar. For the full-body cinematic experience, Sandbox VR at Short Pump. Both are excellent, they just do different things.
Is there free-roam VR in Richmond?
Yes, and you have real choices. Sandbox VR uses full-body haptics and free-roam movement, Zero Latency runs an untethered warehouse-scale arena, and Pelagos VR offers Virtualizer-based Limitless Roam plus a full-body-tracked action arena. That is three distinct free-roam options in one metro.
How much does VR cost in Richmond?
Pelagos runs weekday specials from about $36 per person for a single experience up to $96 for its Run the Gauntlet package. Sandbox VR and Zero Latency use session-based pricing you should confirm on their sites, since rates shift by day and demand.
Is VR in Richmond good for kids?
Yes. Pelagos and the Williamsburg spots (VR64, Dream Machine) are family friendly, and VR64 in particular caters to a wide age range. Check age minimums per venue and per game, since some arena and haptic experiences are aimed at older kids and up.
Do I need to book ahead?
For Sandbox VR, Zero Latency, and Pelagos on weekends, yes, book online, because sessions fill and slots are timed. The Williamsburg arcades are more walk-in friendly, but calling ahead never hurts on a busy Saturday.