A plain walk-through of the one-week free trial: what you can access, what happens when it ends, and how billing begins.
What the trial includes
The Vision Verse free trial lasts one week and opens up the full membership. During the trial you can play the premium games and brain-teasing challenges, read the daily horoscopes, browse the fitness content, and look through the current deals and discounts.
There is no separate "lite" version and nothing is held back for later. The idea of the trial is simply to let you use the real thing for a week before deciding whether it earns a place in your routine.
Because Vision Verse runs in your browser, starting the trial doesn't mean downloading anything. You sign in and the whole membership is there, on whatever device you're using at the time.
What happens when the week ends
If you do nothing, the subscription continues and billing begins at $7.99 per week (AUD), charged weekly through PayPal. The price and the weekly cadence are shown before you start, so the switch from free to paid is never a surprise.
Vision Verse is a paid weekly subscription rather than a permanently free service, and the trial is your window to try it at no cost. The service is for adults aged 18 and over.
After the free week, each weekly payment is taken in advance and simply keeps your access running. There are no other charges from us beyond that weekly amount, and the price you saw at sign-up is the price you pay.
If you decide it's not for you
You can stop before any payment is taken by cancelling the payment to Vision Verse in your PayPal account. Once the recurring payment is cancelled, the next week won't be billed.
It's worth making that decision before the trial week is up, so that cancelling lands in time. If you're the sort of person who forgets, setting a reminder a day or two before the week ends is an easy safeguard.
That's the whole model: one free week, a clear weekly price if you stay, and cancellation in your own PayPal account whenever you want. Nothing about it is designed to be hard to leave.