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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday March 06 2018, @12:38PM   Printer-friendly
from the picking-up-steam dept.

The Rift now represents about 47 percent of all VR headset users on Steam, according to the survey, sneaking just past the Vive at about 45 percent. Microsoft's Windows Mixed Reality initiative, launched late last year, accounts for just over 5 percent of the VR users on the platform.

[...] The Valve hardware survey is a self-selected voluntary sample of all Steam users and only detects VR headsets that are actively plugged in to the computer when the survey tool is run. Still, the rough parity between the two headsets is noteworthy given the Vive's use of the SteamVR standard, which Valve continues to update.

While the Rift is relatively easy to set up and use through Steam, the HTC Vive isn't officially supported on the competing Oculus Home platform.


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  • (Score: 2) by Techwolf on Wednesday March 07 2018, @03:59AM (1 child)

    by Techwolf (87) on Wednesday March 07 2018, @03:59AM (#648862)

    It was the selling of the most promising VR to facebook that sour all the tech fever. It was a betrail by the community held celebratory that did not go over well.

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    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Wednesday March 07 2018, @06:07AM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Wednesday March 07 2018, @06:07AM (#648898) Journal

    It was the selling of the most promising VR to facebook that sour all the tech fever. It was a betrail by the community held celebratory that did not go over well.

    And thus, the Facebook headset supplanted the HTC headset as the top VR headset on Steam. ... Wait, what? I guess most people don't care about Facebook's ownership at all.

    If there was a fever that ended, it was during a time of niche early adopter products and less content. Newer smartphone-based headsets and affordable standalone headsets will have wider appeal (and more often than not, 6 degrees of freedom). If the premium headsets drop the tether and go wireless (using 802.11ad to communicate with a desktop computer), they will be more convenient (although an 802.11ad-capable NIC would probably be needed, unless connectivity could be added using an accessory with a Thunderbolt 3 cable).

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