The Pulse: Feb. 24, 2026

Here's what you need to know about Edmonton today.

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Essentials

  • -4°C: Mainly cloudy. 30% chance of flurries in the morning and late in the afternoon. Wind up to 15 km/h. High minus 4. Wind chill minus 20 in the morning and minus 8 in the afternoon. UV index 1 or low. (forecast)
  • White: The High Level Bridge will be lit white for Peace for Ukraine. (details)
  • 7pm: The Edmonton Oil Kings play the Medicine Hat Tigers at Rogers Place. (details)

A video game screenshot showing a giant villain made of stone and a health bar above its head.

New vrCAVE game to let players swashbuckle from home


By Colin Gallant

Virtual-reality company vrCAVE is ramping up to launch Heroes Together VR, the company's first direct-to-consumer game.

"The technology has changed; it's vastly simplified," Ryan Bromsgrove, vrCAVE's head of growth and marketing, told Taproot. "We decided that the market had changed enough and enough people were now into VR at home that this is something that we could do."

Heroes Together is a product of Basement Bunker Labs, a vrCAVE sub-brand created to help the company distinguish home games from its original bread and butter: social VR escape rooms designed for in-person play at arcades of sorts. When the seeds of vrCAVE were sown by founders Alex and Nathaniel Rossol in 2016, there wouldn't have been a significant market for direct-to-consumer products then because VR headsets cost around $2,000 and the PCs required to run them cost $2,000 or $3,000, Bromsgrove said.

The game-changer has been products such as Meta Quest, which consist of a headset and two controllers, with no need to connect to a PC. The Meta Quest 3 starts at $680, and the lighter 3S costs about $400. Bromsgrove estimated there are about 20 million Meta Quest devices out there among arcades and individual consumers, many of them members of Gen Z.

"Not only did we need people at home to have headsets, we needed people and their friends to have headsets," Bromsgrove said. "You're seeing younger people getting into home VR, rather than what was originally an older demographic that had the time and resources to really get into it."

Heroes Together is a roguelite-style game that places a player and up to three friends in a medieval-ish world, fighting off enemies such as ghostly skeletons or flying eyeballs with swords, bows, magic, or fists. You use your weapon to hack open vessels for treasure and power-ups, and the game's makers promise "countless secrets in hand-designed environments that are endlessly reconfigured every time you play." Your correspondent, a first-time VR gamer, adjusted to being a knight in the virtual world quickly, and while a demo involved a handful of vrCAVE staff at their office, the game can be played among friends remotely, just like conventional online gaming.

Bromsgrove recently got back from CES in Las Vegas, where vrCAVE took over an escape room for an unaffiliated event. There, the company gave influencers and other guests a chance to play Heroes Together, and things got a little raucous. One guest played as the archer and furiously rained arrows across the game environment while lying on the floor.

"I wouldn't necessarily recommend that," Bromsgrove said with a laugh. "But seeing them have a blast was really encouraging to us, because you spend all this time developing this game, and you're having fun with the internal team, but being able to see the public enjoy the game and how they're enjoying it (is really rewarding)."

Guests of vrCAVE will be able to play-test Heroes Together during a free event on Feb. 25 at Edmonton Unlimited. Basement Bunker is also accepting applications for alpha testers for the game, and it's available to wishlist on the Quest and Steam stores.

The event is also a celebration of the 10th anniversary of Hospital of Horror, a haunted-house experience that predates vrCAVE's incorporation in 2017 by a year. Coincidentally, vrCAVE recently launched its 10th escape room game, Cyberscape.

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Headlines: Feb. 24, 2026


By Mariam Ibrahim

  • Edmonton city councillors expect drivers will see relief on roads this 2026 construction season after the 2025 season led to significant congestion. During city council's infrastructure committee meeting on Feb. 23, administration outlined plans for ongoing projects, including the Wellington Bridge and Stage 2 of the Terwillegar Drive expansion. While some delays are still expected on 215 Street, 50 Street and Anthony Henday Drive, and 41 Avenue SW, the City said it aims to improve communication.
  • Edmonton Mayor Andrew Knack warned of an infrastructure deficit on Feb. 23, highlighting a $1.5 billion renewal deficit. With nearly $40 billion in city assets and a growing population, administration told city council's infrastructure committee meeting that aging assets, including one-third of enforcement, policing, and waste-management vehicles, are in poor condition and threaten essential services. Knack advocated for starting a dedicated renewal fund sooner than its planned 2029 kickoff and exploring "dual-use" infrastructure solutions.
  • Edmonton Transit Service ridership declined by 1.8 million passengers in the last three months of 2025, compared to the same period in 2024, according to data obtained by CityNews. Factors contributing to the decrease included ongoing construction, rising transit fares, and a shift from bus services to the LRT.
  • The Alberta Serious Incident Response Team is investigating the death of a man who went into medical distress during an arrest by Edmonton Police Service officers on Feb. 21. Police responded to a report of an assault near 129 Avenue and 119 Street where they said they encountered an incoherent and intoxicated man who resisted arrest. During the incident, the man experienced medical distress; officers provided aid and called emergency medical services. Paramedics transported the man to hospital, where he later died.
  • The Alberta government announced $7.7 billion in funding for physician services in Alberta's upcoming Budget 2026, a $1.4 billion increase from last year. This funding includes $7.3 billion for services, funding, treatments, and training, plus $450 million for recruiting and training doctors. During the funding announcement, Premier Danielle Smith acknowledged the delay in implementing triage-liaison physicians, intended to ease hospital pressures and previously promised for February, saying that the province will negotiate with the Alberta Medical Association in March.
  • Alberta Minister of Primary and Preventative Health Services Adriana LaGrange addressed communication concerns regarding a broad measles warning issued for Parkland County, west of Edmonton. The advisory followed 17 confirmed measles cases. LaGrange said that health officials issued a wide alert because they couldn't pinpoint a specific location. Parkland County Mayor Rod Shaigec and officials from nearby Spruce Grove expressed confusion and concern over the lack of direct notification or specific details. The advisory urges individuals living or travelling to Parkland County to be aware of the current measles risk and encourages vaccination.
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A title card that reads Taproot Edmonton Calendar: edmonton.taproot.events

Happenings: Feb. 24, 2026


By Debbi Serafinchon

Here are some events happening today in the Edmonton area.

And here are some upcoming events to keep in mind:

Visit the Taproot Edmonton Calendar for many more events in the Edmonton region.

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