Sony PlayStation VR May Be The Big Winner in 2016

 

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Sony may just be the most successful premium immersive VR headset to date. In this article by Bryant Fraser from Studio Daily he spells out just why.

Forget about Oculus Rift and put the HTC Vive aside. It’s time for high-end VR to make it into the mainstream with today’s launch of the Sony PlayStation VR headset.

It’s not that the Oculus and Vive are bad technology. But the installed base of PlayStation 4 consoles is much higher than the number of VR-capable PCs in consumer households. Research firm IHS Technology said last week that it expects the PlayStation VR to outsell the Oculus Rift and HTC Vivecombined by the end of this year.

PlayStation VR arrives in a market that’s still largely driven by low-end, smartphone VR headsets — IHS says the $100 Samsung Gear is expected to finish the year with the largest installed base, about 5.4 million. “The smartphone VR base will be a major opportunity for VR content experimentation,” said IHS Technology Senior Director Ian Fogg in a prepared statement. “Smartphone VR headsets’ share of the VR installed base will be 87 percent at the end of 2016.”

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Samsung will soon have a strong competitor in that segment as Google rolls out its Pixel phone and $80 Daydream View headset. The firm says Daydream View will be the most popular VR headset by 2019.

Despite smaller sales volume, Oculus, HTC and Sony are drawing increasing amounts of revenue from the VR market. The average selling price of headsets was just $26 in 2015 but should climb to around $85 this year and reach $191 in 2017, IHS said.

So what are people going to actually do with the PlayStation VR? Well, that’s an excellent question. Early reviews of games have been mixed, and the best-reviewed games have tended to be inexpensive ($20-$30) titles like Thumper, a soccer-themed game controlled entirely by the player’s head movements, or the venerable Rez Infinite, the latest in a franchise that dates back to the Sega Dreamcast. Batman: Arkham VR has been reasonably well reviewed but also described as essentially a tech demo, and tank-shooter Battlezone has been surprisingly well-reviewed by writers who still object to its $60 price point. Minecraft has had exceptional reviews and being able to check out GGServers to support the game, and play with others, playing multiplayer is so much more fun!

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