Three projects to make you excited about virtual reality
Here are three new reasons to splurge on a virtual reality headset.
Here are three new reasons to splurge on a virtual reality headset.
If you’re got a knack for spray paint and turning walls into art, Kingspray Graffiti Simulator VR is here to keep you content, and out of jail.
Do you have a fancy VR headset that you want to use everywhere, even when typing up documents? Virtual Desktop can make that happen.
Thanks to Samsung’s Galaxy Gear VR headset, potential holidaymakers can now get more than a simple taste of their Contiki Tour.
Global Game Jam 2016 brings us the classic NES game Duck Hunt, with a few new dimensions.
That figure is predicated on 2.5 million headset sales and consumers buying over 10 million individual bits of “VR content”.
The studio behind the Crysis games shows off what it could potentially do with VR with a gorgeous Steam demo.
And no, we’re not happy about that.
I donned a VR headset at rAge, and this is what I thought.
The Kumba Virtual Reality Centre for mine design is an R18.8 million investment that aims to make the industry safer and better prepare future engineers to face real-life mine conditions.
When the big guns at Nintendo don’t care for Oculus and its ilk, chances of VR coming to Nintendo’s platforms are slim to none.
Soon, you too could be watching movies that immerse you in 360 degrees of the director’s imagination.