It was apparent pretty quickly after I started messing around with it: Oculus Quest is Watch Maninilip Onlinethe best virtual reality platform out there and it isn't even close. But I still wonder how far it can really go.
In video games, graphics tend to get the most fanfare. If something is dull but it looks especially pretty, it's generally going to attract a more favorable response. So when we see some new VR tech announced, like Valve's high-end Index, the focus tends to center on resolution. How much better does this new hardware look compared to all the rest?
SEE ALSO: Oculus Quest review: A new milestone for VRQuest, which is out on May 21 alongside the second-generation Rift S, challenges that notion. It's wireless VR, but with significantly more power than mobile solutions like Gear VR or cardboard. What you see inside the headset doesn't look badby any stretch -- far better than mobile options, certainly, and roughly on par with the Rift -- but the thing that makes it appealing is its all-in-one design.
You don't need sensor stations or an external PC. There's a smartphone app that handles day one setup, casting, and store purchases (there's also an in-headset store), but that's it. All of the heavy lifting is handled by the Quest; you just put on the headset, spend a minute or so setting up your play area, and you're off.
The experience sells itself. All it takes is a couple rounds of Beat Saber, a game that I'd argue is the first real "killer app" for VR. It's a rhythm game where you hold different-colored lightsaber-like energy swords in each hand. You play by slicing boxes in half as they slide down a Guitar Hero-like note highway. Arrows on each box tell you which direction to slice. There are also obstacles to dodge and bombs to keep your swords away from.
The soundtrack is filled with fast-moving techno beats that are meant to get your body moving. It's an astonishingly powerful VR experience regardless of the hardware you're using, but Quest feels like the ideal home for Beat Saber. You're not wired to anything, so you're completely free to lose yourself to the rhythm.
New VR tech is coming along too quickly for early adopters to realistically keep up.
I can't get enough of it. I think it has the immediate stickiness that a lot of other VR options lack because of the low fidelity of experiences (on the mobile side) or the complexity of setting everything up (on the PC side). It's plug and play.
It's also a newcomer in a crowded market for a young technology that hasn't exactly found its generational cadence just yet. I'll bet most of you out there in reader land don't know the difference between a Vive and a Vive Pro without looking it up. Or a Rift and a Rift S. And now there's this Index that came along out of nowhere, offering modest improvement on hardware that, in the case of the Rift S specifically, isn't even out yet.
It's a confusing time to be a VR enthusiast, to be sure. Most of us have already spent money on one platform or another. That doesn't mean we're locked in forever, but this is expensive gear we're talking about. New VR tech is coming along too quickly for early adopters to realistically keep up.
In a vacuum, the Quest is an incredible proposition: $400 gets you a fully self-contained VR gaming console, the first of its kind. I just don't know if there's an audience for it right now. The Quest is already less powerful than a Rift or Vive paired with a recommended spec PC, and we're only a month or two from seeing even more powerful next-gen PC headsets hit the market.
At the other end of the spectrum, people who don't game on PC already have a range of options available. Gear VR and cardboard for the mobile crowd and PlayStation VR or (in a more limited sense) Nintendo's Labo VR Kit for the console folks.
So where does Quest fit into that picture? That's the problem. It doesn't really fit. The headset is arriving in this between moment for the developing tech. I think the experience itself delivers perhaps the truest realization of VR's promise. But it's at risk of being outpaced by next-gen products that are already dated for release.
Oculus Quest has the potential to deliver what VR is missing most: an inflection point. The pitch isn't better specs or richer graphics, but rather an experience that feels like an overall game-changer. The timing couldn't be worse, though. Oculus needs an audience, but the ideal audience for it is so caught up in a fast-moving market that Quest is at risk of being lost in the crowd.
Topics Gaming Oculus Virtual Reality
'CU in the NT' is quite possibly the wildest tourism slogan everTinder launches Double Date feature to swipe with your BFFReporting from the front lines with mobile journalismTinder launches Double Date feature to swipe with your BFFDude who took selfies in the middle of a forest fire gets scolded AFWatch Katy Perry perform on the campaign trail for her pal, 'Hilly C'Chicago partied like it was 1908 during the Cubs victory paradeJulian Assange finally to be interviewed by prosecutorsThere is a 100% chance that Nate Silver is f**king furiousRussian artists' book bags let you wear your favorite novel as a purseReporting from the front lines with mobile journalismXiaomi launches its Magic Mouse 2'You have a knife? I have two': Store owner scares away thief like a boss'Silicon Valley' star shuts down BlizzCon haters in one InstagramMeet the 12Lady Gaga channels the suffragette movement in electionJulian Assange finally to be interviewed by prosecutorsMove fast, but be careful: The challenges of education techArrested woman turns over her tote bag and the surprise koala thereinFree 'Diablo' remake is coming to 'Diablo 3: Reaper of Souls' 10 of the most stressful TV scenes of 2022 Apple launches Emergency SOS via satellite in Europe Scarlett Johansson inspires memes after saying she should be able to play 'any tree' This dude couldn't afford a trip to Hawaii, so he green A conversation with your therapist is the most relatable new meme These musicians invented sex, according to the latest Twitter meme Don't worry, meth Croatia vs Brazil livestream: How to watch FIFA World Cup quarterfinals live Prince George's sixth birthday photos are just as adorable as you'd expect Horrifying video shows a man operating a plane TV with his foot Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for December 13 Apple will allow third The 'Cats' trailer gave everyone nightmares, so we're coping with memes Oklahoma animal shelter uses Area 51 meme to raise adoption awareness Wordle today: Here's the answer, hints for December 12 Morocco vs Portugal livestream: How to watch FIFA World Cup quarterfinals live Instagram will tell you if they don't want to recommend your posts Trump haters commiserate with UK over Boris Johnson with a heartfelt meme Don't do this: 10 of the worst crimes against mac and cheese The U.S. is building its case against FTX founder Sam Bankman
2.6121s , 8223.9296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Maninilip Online】,Evergreen Information Network