Oculus Rift, or Bro, do you even Rift?

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VG_Addict

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Jul 16, 2013
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What do you think of the Oculus Rift? Do you think it'll be the next revolution of gaming, or is it just a novelty? I think it's a neat device with a lot of possibilities.
 

Roxas1359

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Aug 8, 2009
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I will honestly say this, I've honestly never heard anything about this "almighty" Oculus Rift anywhere else except on the Escapist. I don't even know what it is honestly, and from what I've heard about it it's something that I honestly do not care for. :p
 

Maxtro

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Feb 13, 2011
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I am very excited for the Rift.

VR has a ton of potential but it is something that is very difficult to pull off successfully.

Currently I'm more interested in buying the Rift than I am in buying a next gen console.

I wish there was a given release date for the consumer version, but I understand and appreciate that the company wants to make sure that the product is ready instead of trying to meet an arbitrary deadline.
 

Caiphus

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Mar 31, 2010
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Generally haven't been excited for any of the 'gimmicks' this generation, including touch screens, motion controls, voice commands, 3D, etc. I am pretty excited for the Oculus Rift though, and will buy one once it becomes widely available and has games.

As for the next revolution of gaming? Far too early to tell. For some genres, shooters, first-person RPGs or racing games, it shows potential. For others it won't have much use.

Edit:

 

MysticSlayer

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Apr 14, 2013
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Based on what I've read and seen, I'm not really that interested. The only benefit I can see to it is that it would make games more "immersive", but I find them good enough in that regard already, even without gimmicky 3D effects and virtual reality.

On the other hand, I can think of many negative issues to come of this. For starters, it makes you the perfect target for pranks from your roommates, at least once they stop laughing at how ridiculous you look. It doesn't look fun at all to use head movements to control where you look, similar to how everyone thought the Wii-mote would be perfect for shooters before we actually got a chance to try it. Not to mention, I wonder what this will do to your eyes after spending enough time with it. I can't imagine it will be good for them.
 

Lilani

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May 27, 2009
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If the Rift does take off, at its most successful it will be another "revolution" in gaming as much as the Wii or mobile games were the next "revolutions" in games. It's a new niche in the market, so I don't get where everybody is getting this notion it somehow has to boot out controllers to "win." Why can't we have a system that allows for virtual reality alongside regular systems, just as we have mobile games alongside consoles? I would love to see it succeed, but anybody who thinks it's somehow going to replace regular controllers is just kidding themselves.
 

Fiz_The_Toaster

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Jan 19, 2011
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I don't see what the big damn deal about this is, and when I first saw it I was having horrible flashbacks to the Virtual Boy. Not that it's the same thing, because it's not, but the design of it made me think of headaches and eye strain.

I don't see how it's gonna revolutionize anything, but that's just me. If it's not a holodeck then I don't care about virtual reality right now.
 

Andy Shandy

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Jun 7, 2010
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I will gladly puke to be able to use this with Mirror's Edge, that's all I know.
 

Chimpzy_v1legacy

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Jun 21, 2009
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The way I see it, the Oculus Rift will likely become a niche alternative method of playing certain types of games. Mostly first person games, as those are best suited to the way the device is intended to work. Looking at the list of games that (will) support it, this seems to be the case.

Lilani said:
I would love to see it succeed, but anybody who thinks it's somehow going to replace regular controllers is just kidding themselves.
From what I can tell, it only really replaces your tv/monitor and the mouse/right analog stick. You'll still need some other control input for everything else.
 

Corven

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Sep 10, 2008
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Playing horror games with this thing would be the best thing, I am very interested in the oculus rift due to this idea.
 

Treeinthewoods

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May 14, 2010
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This is something I dreamed of while I played Chuck Yeager's Flight Simulator on my grandpa's orange screen Tandy computer...

I hope it doesn't suck.
 

Zhukov

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Dec 29, 2009
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I don't know whether or not to be interested.

It's something that I'd need to try for myself before knowing if it's any good, and I can't do that because it's not publicly available. So all I have to go an are second hand accounts of people saying it's pretty neat.
 

PBMcNair

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Aug 31, 2009
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A friend of mine has one of the early dev models, so he invited me over to take a look. It took a few minutes to get me set up, and then he fired up a fresh world in Minecraft. The resolution isn't great on the early model, but it was like I was standing in Minecraft. I don't know if its going to be the next thing for gaming, but its definitely interesting.

I could almost feel my eyes straining as I used it though. And getting used to being able to look around in-game is tricky. I think it would be a great thing in a simulation game, something like MechWarrior. A game where your in a VR cockpit you can look around and then use to control your mech/plane/whatever.
 

tzimize

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Mar 1, 2010
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OR + Star Citizen. I will finally be able to go to spaaaaaaaaaaaaaace!

How can this not be a big deal? It has the potential to be the next VERY big thing, but I'll wait and see.
 

Maximum Bert

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Feb 3, 2013
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Not hugely interested to be honest but not disinterested either. If they get the price to a reasonable level say under 100 pounds then I may give it a look but anymore than that and no way.

I am not sure how it will work for games that arent first person does it offer any benefits there? I could be wrong and it could be awesome for all kinds of games but I am sceptical there.

I am also worried about eye strain its bad enough already with me sitting a few feet from the monitor with it darkened right down even now I can feel the eye strain simply because I do a lot of my work and leisure on the computer. I dont know how the oculus will perform in this area.

I think it will find its niche but I also dont think its going to be as huge a deal as some people think it is and I almost guarantee it will not function as well as people would like i.e turning your head in game feels the same as turning your head in real life.
 

Smooth Operator

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Oct 5, 2010
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Well I had it on for only an hour but as it does deliver about 4 novelties at the same time the experience is one heck of a thrill ride, essentially Rift versus monitor is the difference between controller+TV and a racing cabinet, doesn't seem like a big difference when described but the experiences are miles apart.
Because you get full vision coverage and 110° of that being the actual image (compared to 20° for a couch + TV view, or 55° for desk + monitor), on top of that proper 3D with separate images for each eye, and most importantly real time head tracking makes it feel like you are actually standing in the virtual world... so much in fact that you need to be sitting or your will seriously hurt yourself.

All that being said however this is an early prototype, it is very expensive (looking at $500 for the quality release), has lot's of issues setting things up and games do need to be specifically reworked before it functions even half decently, not to mention standard 2D UI doesn't work with Rift and head tracking is an extra input which games do not even consider at this point.
Also this screws with your vision and orientation like nothing we have seen before, after an hour I couldn't even stand for ten minutes, try using it for several hours and this is sure to cause some serious nausea not to mention what it would do to your eyes in the long run.

Wouldn't call it revolution but it certainly is a very unique way of experiencing a virtual world, probably not advisable for the average user at this point but still very functional.
 

lacktheknack

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Jan 19, 2009
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Corven said:
Playing horror games with this thing would be the best thing, I am very interested in the oculus rift due to this idea.
Worst*

I mean, it's a great idea. I'd just cry endlessly if I ever tried one. ;____;

OT: I don't think Oculus Rift is the best thing evar. I imagine it'll have a lot of niggling problems like the Kinect ended up having.

It would be cool if I'm wrong.
 

Genocidicles

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Sep 13, 2012
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Make it cheap, and I'll give it a go.

Certainly seems better than bullshit like the Kinect and Wii controllers.
 

BitterLemon

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Jul 10, 2013
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A developer from work bought one and I've tried two demos, one was a rollercoaster and the other was a Unity demo that had a empty house in a mediterranean island. It's really immersive. When you see someone else using it, it seems like they are faking it or are really high, but when you put the thing on your head, it really fools your brain, you have a very real sensation that you are there. I have fear of heights and the rollercoster one made sweat, I almost felt the G-force... my friends laughed watching me suffer. It's something way beyond common 3D glasses.

But like others said, the resolution is low, you need to setup the glasses for your vision angle and body height and is very boring to do so and you have a very strange feeling of disconnection with your body. The rollercoaster one had you "legs" when you looked down, but it was very bizarre because your brain somewhat believes that's your legs, but they don't respond and you feel like you're suffering some kind of paralysis... or like you're inside John Malkovich. The motion sickness is really a issue... I felt really nauseated and a friend that's prone to motion sickness almost threw up after 10 minutes. The eye strain is very hard too, since your eyes are glued to a LCD screen.

Another funny effect is that you perceive much more the polygonal nature of 3D graphics. The Unity demo wasn't that low poly, but because you have such a amazing depth perception, you feel like you're inside a cardboard world, specially when looking at organic things, like plants.

I think it's hard that will be a success at consumer level. It's amazing, but it's still very cubersome as a product. It's kinda like a light gun: it's cool sometimes at the arcade, but it's tiresome to have it at home.
 

Dryk

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Dec 4, 2011
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I got to try the Rift the other day, shit's impressive. You can actually feel the first few steps you take as your body tries to adjust to the thing.

BitterLemon said:
A developer from work bought one and I've tried two demos, one was a rollercoaster and the other was a Unity demo that had a empty house in a mediterranean island. It's really immersive. When you see someone else using it, it seems like they are faking it or are really high, but when you put the thing on your head, it really fools your brain, you have a very real sensation that you are there. I have fear of heights and the rollercoster one made sweat, I almost felt the G-force... my friends laughed watching me suffer. It's something way beyond common 3D glasses.
That's because at the end of the day normal 3D is a fancy diorama.