Yeah loving the sound of the HDR oled screens for a vr set, could really be the best screens in vr. Plus all the haptics of the dualsense in vr should really boost immersion.PSVR2 looks like it'll give high-end PC VR a run for its money, and also provide some competition for the Quest 2. Though the cost of the PS5 + PSVR2 is likely to be several times that of a Quest 2. Of course if you already have a PS5 then PSVR2 will be more affordable.
PSVR2 looks like it'll give high-end PC VR a run for its money, and also provide some competition for the Quest 2. Though the cost of the PS5 + PSVR2 is likely to be several times that of a Quest 2. Of course if you already have a PS5 then PSVR2 will be more affordable.
If it's as good as I hope it's going to be it'll sell me a PS5. My gaming PC got sold off and replaced by a Series X so I have no need for one yet but I'm really intrigued by VR and PSVR2 might be the tipping point to actually get into it
Unless you're anti facebook, a quest 2 is absolutely a great way to get into VR right now, no gaming PC required, and plenty of decent things to do on it.
Which looks better out of the PSVR & standalone Quest 2 ?
Much thanks for thisIt's not as simple as you might think.,
Quest 2 has higher resolution and almost no screen door effect, but the native games (that run on the headset itself) are lower in graphics quality than PSVR games. PC games run via air-link or a link cable can be much better than PSVR graphics, but the image is compressed so can suffer from noise and artefacts, plus of course you need a monster PC to run PC VR at the Quest native resolution. It also has a LCD display so the blacks are greyish. The lenses are freznel so you can get some glare.
PSVR has low resolution, but is an OLED display so the colours are more vibrant and the blacks deeper. The games look better than native Quest games for the most part, but not always as good as PCVR. The lenses are non-freznel so they're pretty clear.
The main advantage of the Quest 2 is versatility. You can run it with native games on the headset, or PC games via wireless or a link cable. The controllers are way, way, better than the PSVR move controllers, so they can handle a wider variety of games better, plus you have hand tracking for controller less play.
Much thanks for this
I own a Quest 2 but have never used a PSVR