Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Computing
  4. Wearables
  5. Legacy Archives

Consumer-ready virtual reality from Oculus VR is months away, but input questions remain

Add as a preferred source on Google

Speaking at 2014’s Web Summit in Dublin, Ireland, Oculus VR CEO Brendan Iribe noted that the retail release of the company’s Rift virtual reality headset — which has sold more than 100,000 units so far, even though it’s still in active development — is less than a year away (via The Next Web).

“We’re all hungry for it to happen. We’re getting very close. It’s months, not years away, but many months,” he said.

Recommended Videos

The actual headset is said to be close to being final, which lines up with what we heard at June’s E3 2014 about Oculus already working with a consumer prototype behind closed doors in its offices.  What’s holding up the Oculus Rift, in general, is the lack of a quality input device one could use to interact with whatever it is that’s being displayed on the headset’s two 960×1080 screens (per eye, based on the latest Dev Kit specs).

According to Iribe, your typical mouse-keyboard combination just isn’t good enough.  Neither is a gamepad, nor any kind of gesture-based recognition system. The input has to have some kind tactile element to it, but Oculus VR just isn’t sure what that might be just yet.

Not only does Oculus VR wants to make sure that it gets everything right the first time, but it (naturally) worries that rivals might rush out and deliver an inferior product. “We’ve gone out there and set this bar and said, ‘We want to get it right,'” Iribe said. “We don’t want it to be four or five years. We’re eager for this to happen.”

David Murphy
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Wielding Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism, David Murphy has…
Valve just made the Steam Deck OLED much more expensive
Steam Deck OLED now costs enough to emotionally damage gamers
The Steam Deck OLED on a pink background.

Valve has officially raised the prices of the Steam Deck OLED in the US and several other global markets, and the increases are substantial. The move makes the company the latest major gaming platform holder to hike hardware pricing amid rising component costs and ongoing global economic pressures.

The biggest shock comes from the higher-end models. The 1TB Steam Deck OLED now costs $950 in the US, up from its original $650 launch price. Meanwhile, the 512GB OLED version has jumped from $550 to $790.

Read more
The Witcher 3 is dragging Geralt out of retirement for one last hunt
CD Projekt Red has announced a third expansion for 2027, with Fool’s Theory helping build a new adventure for PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC
Person, Samurai, Adult

CD Projekt Red is sending Geralt back to The Witcher 3. The studio has announced Songs of the Past, a third expansion for Wild Hunt coming in 2027 to PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and PC.

The news pulls a decade-old RPG back into the center of the conversation. The Witcher 3 expansion puts players on the Path with Geralt of Rivia again, with Fool’s Theory co-developing alongside the studio.

Read more
GTA 6 scammers are cashing in before Rockstar sells a single copy
Fake GTA 6 beta traps are preying on impatient fans
Lucia and her partner rob a store in GTA 6.

While some gamers are mourning the GTA 6's old release date passing by (May 26), there are others who are being lured into scams. Rockstar Games has yet to release its most anticipated games ever, and there's no official public beta either. But scammers have decided that this is the perfect time to start hunting impatient fans.

The report from NordVPN's Threat Intelligence team found that cybercriminals are exploiting massive interest around Grand Theft Auto VI with fake installers, bogus beta access, Android adware, and phishing pages. This arrives as the studio is expected to kick off pre-orders for the game, which is currently set to debut on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and Series S on no

Read more