‘Red Flowers’ Becomes ‘Catana’ as Joy Way Aims to Appeal to Younger Quest Crowd
Joy Way, the studio behind STRIDE: Fates (2023) and EXOcars (2024), initially announced VR action-platformer Red Flowers back in 2022, which was slated to bring bloody ninja-slicing action along with some high-flying parkour. Now, the studio revealed Red Flowers is making a major pivot to ostensibly appeal to younger users. Now called Catana: Red Flowers, the game has done away […] The post ‘Red Flowers’ Becomes ‘Catana’ as Joy Way Aims to Appeal to Younger Quest Crowd appeared first on Road to VR.



Joy Way, the studio behind STRIDE: Fates (2023) and EXOcars (2024), initially announced VR action-platformer Red Flowers back in 2022, which was slated to bring bloody ninja-slicing action along with some high-flying parkour. Now, the studio revealed Red Flowers is making a major pivot to ostensibly appeal to younger users.
Now called Catana: Red Flowers, the game has done away with the the impossibly high city buildings and gritty aesthetic, instead offering up a decidedly more family-friendly vibe, replete with a kitty protagonist and wise (and accident prone) Grandpa Kenji to help you along the way.
Targeting a 2025 release on Quest and PSVR 2, Catana: Red Flowers lets you take on the role of a nimble ninja cat, letting you dash through enemies, deflect bullets, swing around, and wield a katana. Between levels, the game also offers up a cozy garden where you can sharpen your blade, play with Grandpa Kenji, “or just be a silly cat,” the studio says.
From the trailer, there’s still a good slice of bloody katana deaths, although Joy Way notes this can be toggled off in the settings, replacing it with a burst of flowers. While movement mechanics and enemies aren’t entirely a far cry from the 2022 demo (seen below), the art and level design marks a clear departure from the grittiness of the original.
Joy Way says that although its demo of Red Flowers garnered over 500k installs following its release on Quest’s now-defunct App Lab, “extensive player interviews and […] valuable feedback” led the studio to “fully reimagine and evolve the concept.”
While the studio hasn’t said as much, the pivot comes amid a wider shift in the Quest player base, principally driven by the entrance of Quest 3S, Meta’s latest $300 mixed reality headset.
Meta noted in early 2025 that a wave of younger players was not only boosting free-to-play content on the platform, but also paid premium content, which Meta noted at the time included games like I AM CAT (2024) and Five Nights at Freddy’s: Help Wanted 2 (2024).
There’s no release date for Catana: Red Flowers yet beyond “later this year,” although you can now wishlist the game on the Horizon Store for Quest 2 and above, and on the PlayStation Store for PSVR 2.
The post ‘Red Flowers’ Becomes ‘Catana’ as Joy Way Aims to Appeal to Younger Quest Crowd appeared first on Road to VR.