PlayStation VR Pre-Orders Sell Out In Minutes At Amazon (roadtovr.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Once seen as the underdog, Sony's PlayStation VR headset continues to hold its own against PC-based competitors Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. The company announced last week that they won't ship the PSVR headset until October, but they also announced an attractive $399 price compared to the Rift at $599 and Vive at $799. And it appears the company's existing addressable market of 36 million PS4 owners are ready to get on board; Amazon U.S. opened pre-orders for the PSVR Launch Bundle this morning and sold out of its stock allocation in less than 10 minutes. Walmart befell the same fate quickly thereafter, though several other retailers in the U.S. are still showing pre-order stock.
I wonder what degree of motion sickness a vr helmet would do. One idea i had for a vr game was being suspended by a 3drange of motion harness. Do movements like you're in space in an iron man suit playing a game of soccer... The queasiness of vr and being spun around would probably outweigh the coolness factor.
God spoke to me
We all know that video game addiction can reach some pretty amazing levels. Even way back in the early days of Multi-User-Dungeons (MUDs) I knew some people who were so addicted to these games that they wouldn't leave the house for weeks just to play them non-stop. With VR entering the picture how deep will the addiction and weirdness go?
Right now for any reasonably popular multi-user game there are huge subcultures on youtube, reddit and elsewhere dedicated to the finest intricacies of the game and literally thousands of hours of recorded game play. With VR I wonder in what weird ways will this all intensify.
What about the social aspects of this? Are people really going to VR helmets at Starbucks or other public settings?
I'm saving my money for a Sybian VR.
You are welcome on my lawn.
Not necessarily a trick, but a gauge of the market. It's not ready, no. But the promise is that it will be.
It's 399 if you already have the required camera and move controllers.(Which a lot of people don't have.) There is a package deal with those included for 499.
Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
This article would be infinity more informative if we were told what Amazon's allotment was. Selling 100 units of VR equipment on a major console in a short amount of time would be completely unimpressive. Selling 100k would be very impressive. Without the numbers the only thing this tells us is we can't buy the VR gear from Amazon.
I ignore Anonymous Coward posts. If you want to discuss something, that's awesome. Log in.
There will be no boycott this year? Is this thing going to be safer than a Sony CD?
“He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
Do you realise that the finished PSVR was demonstrated to most game journalists and game developers in the recent Game Developers Conference? All reviews from this have been amazingly positive of the experience, except for one or two that complained about lag with the Move controller. They were _all_ very positive about the headset hardware itself, and its performance.
Now, perhaps 20% of those journalists may fit into your category of "stupid enough to fall for marketing hype". Not all, though. Certainly not the game devs. Those guys know what they're talking about.
My brother is a graphics programmer and a game dev. He was at the GDC. He tried the Sony headset. He was very impressed with it, rating it above the Vive for graphic quality, despite the PSVR having lower resolution. Believe me, he is no idiot.
The PSVR undoubtedly works well. Development has been years in the making, starting even before the Rift kickstarter, and it is now finished. The only ones who bore the development costs are Sony themselves. All is left now is manufacturing and distribution. Preorders help the manufacturer know what demand there is for the product, and how much effort they need to go to for manufacture. People putting their money down early is the best way for a manufacturer to gauge what demand will be like. The preorder numbers are invaluable for the high level of manufacturing needed for this.
Virtual reality has been a dream for a lot of people. Sony's PSVR has made that dream relatively affordable. Don't be a dick and call them dumb.
What a sad individual you are. Look at the effort you go to to vent anger over a fucking consumer level product. You need help. That much angst and anger is not healthy. Get a fucking life and ignore the crap others enjoy if it's not something your interested. What they spend their money is nothing to do with you.
Yes, you don't know me or my brother, so you can choose to disregard his informed opinion if you like. Yes, some journalists rush stories, or aren't quite knowledgeable as they should be, so you can choose to disregard what those journalists say. You can even believe that the end consumer product may not be as good as what was shown at the GDC. That's your belief.
The "morons" who have prepaid for it have read the opinions of people of many people that have experienced the product. They're basing their pre-purchase on the fact that all people who have tried it, have approved of it. This is an informed purchase. They're paying $400 for a product that has excellent reviews. Your take is basically "don't trust them, don't trust the thousands of people that have tried it, don't trust anyone but yourself". Basically, the cynical point of view.
I think it _very_ unlikely that Sony would take a product demonstrated to thousands of developers, and god knows how many journalists, and make it worse. But you know what, if you think they may do so, that's fine. I'm not actually trying to convince you to preorder the thing. I'm just trying to say that calling everyone who preorders it a moron, is a pretty awful thing to do, and even worse, is not even right. If it was ordered totally blind, you may have a leg to stand on. But the headset has been experienced by so many people, so many! The majority, or even unanimous, consensus is that it's the real deal. Based on that, a preorder is quite understandable.
Laugh if you will. Those that preorder this are happy with their decision. Please try to respect that and not insult them.
why in the actual fuck are you ranting about this here.... have you nothing better to do, nowhere else to express your hate?
The "morons" who have prepaid for it have read the opinions of people of many people that have experienced the product. They're basing their pre-purchase on the fact that all people who have tried it, have approved of it. This is an informed purchase.
Remember those Gamergate dildos who were ranting about "ethics in gaming journalism"? They're especially dildoish because there has never been ethics in gaming journalism. Most gaming journalism is utter bullshit. Gaming reviews are consistently excessively high (8 and 9 scores for games that are barely playable) precisely because of the factors described in the GP comment, including reviewers who want to continue reviewing so they say nice things, and pre-release demos which are carefully constructed to avoid demonstrating the holes in the technology.
In short, any gamer who doesn't know this is either brand fucking new, or a complete goddamned idiot. We all know that buying prerelease stuff means you get bugs, you get things that will be revised out later. And you don't save any money doing it, so what are these people paying for? They're paying to be the first to experience the bugs. That's pretty fucking stupid if you're not so wealthy that the money is irrelevant.
Those who remember the lessons of history are doomed to stand around and watch others repeat them. I bet you buy Bethesda prereleases too, and don't wait for them to fix the 2308472823727 quest-stopping bugs that they put into literally every game they make.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
It depends on your genes, I guess.
I've tried "roller coaster" in Oculus Rift (first version).
It was fine and quite fun.
Then colleague started another demo without stopping previous one (which kept holding control) so that when I was rotating my head "world" was rotating with it.
I got VERY strong nausea which lasted for several hours (although, that kind of environment is probably irrelevant in normal conditions).
One of my colleagues who tried VR felt sick for about 2 weeks (!!!). Although that was one out of 20 guys, so is rather rare.
As Sony's representative once explained, what developers could do is minimize impact of technology being imperfect, by reducing lag, increasing frame rates etc, HOWEVER if you would feel sick sitting in a plane doing (mild, so that G-force doesn't matter much) acrobatics, you would also get sick when doing that in a game even if you are in a perfect VR helm, they can not fix that.
Don't be a dick and call them dumb.
That would be dumb... but can we call them dicks?
Just to be extra pedantic you have to pay local sales tax from all sites offering pre-orders, so it's more than $499 also.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Ask me why you don't get invited to many parties.
The thing you are totally overlooking with your Uriel level nerd rant is that Sony and game makers are going to put forth a lot of effort to make sure the thing works as well as possible. As mentioned already the GDC unit were really good - they may have been optimized to some extent but you ALSO overlook that the GDC units are before several months more of development goes into the shipping product. So no matter how "tuned" cdc units were, shipping units will be better.
Why do you have to be so down on something fun? A few hundred dollars is not a lot of money to most tech workers who could use a break from the fixed screen they have and put one over their head instead.
You belong with the telephone sanitizers on a rocket shipped off the earth so the rest of us can have a good life free of your illogical rage.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Really? Most gaming journalism is utter bullshit? Methinks you have a penchant for hyperbole, my friend.
Sure, some game journalists may lack ethics, but I'm pretty sure it's not as pervasive as you make it out to be. Not that I read every game article in the world, I suppose, but the articles I do read, on the sites I visit, are often quite good and not afraid to call out bullshit when they encounter it. It also helps to realise that game reporting, for the most part, is a subjective issue. It's next to impossible to score. The best articles are ones which describe what the reviewer likes and dislikes about the game, so you can compare that to what you like and dislike. Any provided game score is almost immaterial.
Besides, as far as the PSVR is concerned, I also have the word of my brother, who works in the field of computer graphics, was at the recent GDC, and actually tried the headset there. If you can't trust family, who can you trust! OK, I may regret that last sentence.
Agreed about Bethesda, though I think that's the nature of that type of game. Even New Vegas suffered from quest bugs, and that was done by Obsidian.
Why would you, buy something that isn't ready, has not been previewed, reviewed and is price inflated?
(a) Sony has shown they mostly ship things that are production (but honestly with VR being so new who cares if it's still a bit beta? Software updates can fix most things).
(b) It has been previewed which is why I pre-ordered one.
(c) You seem to be confused as to what "price inflated" means. I will get one at launch for $499. If you want one anytime before next January you will pay a LOT more. Explain to me again how it is "price inflated" when I am the one buying at list...
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
Stop listening to your mother.
There has never been any evidence that being too close to a screen - or indeed... anything you might see in the ordinary course of a day - is damaging to your eyes. Your eyes have this amazing thing called "focus" and when something's too bright they hurt and make you look away. Apart from UV, pretty much anything else is fine to look at so long as your eyes do not complain themselves.
Also, no your face won't stay like that, you won't go blind, and, no, the bogeyman won't cut your tongue out.
Unfortunately, even with a "PS 4.5" you'll be stuck with last-gen graphics within several years, while PC gamers will have access to affordable upgrades and, likely, to newer headsets that require them (not to mention all the user-created content that comes with PC games). I'm not a fanboy, I don't have a high end gaming PC. But when I get into VR, it's going to be on an upgradeable, user-moddable platform.
The Daddy casts sleep on the Baby. The Baby resists!
what anger are you talking about?
i'm not angry at all, not emotionally involved in any way.
sorry that you feel so offended by someone pointing out the obvious truths about the idiocy of pre-paying for non-existent products.
I don't think they'd deliberately make the product worse. (not unless they planned to release an improved model in the near future, and a) there's no evidence of that and b) such a move would almost certainly backfire by killing the market).
I do think it's possible that the demo unit was finely tuned or hacked up to work just for the demo and isn't anywhere near as good in general non-demo use.
There's a long history of this happening with computer products. The mockup demo has so long a history that it qualifies as both "traditional" and "completely normal and expected".
BTW, given that "caveat emptor" is considered an acceptable and even admirable business practice in the US, the cynical point of view is the only sensible one that a consumer can have. unless they're happy with being ripped off by scumbag conmen.
As for respecting their decision - well, i respect their right to make that decision (there's nothing illegal, immoral, or unethical about making such a decision - although I do think that Sony and their sales partners, but not the buyer, are behaving unethically in asking for and accepting pre-paid sales).
I also respect my own right to regard that decision as idiotic and don't feel obliged in any way to respect the decision itself. In fact, respecting something you think is idiotic is pretty much impossible.
And I respect and exercise my right to express my opinion on the matter.
Really? Most gaming journalism is utter bullshit? Methinks you have a penchant for hyperbole, my friend.
Oh, I do, but this time I'm being quite literal. Most gaming journalism is indeed entirely bullshit.
Besides, as far as the PSVR is concerned, I also have the word of my brother, who works in the field of computer graphics, was at the recent GDC, and actually tried the headset there. If you can't trust family, who can you trust! OK, I may regret that last sentence.
I went to GDC once because I could get a pass and go for free. I saw a lot of things that never showed up again at all, and a lot of things that didn't turn out to be as awesome as the demo implied.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
It is labeled as "hate" because that is exactly what it is! Even worse, there are no reliable sources given for any of the claims and the claims totally ignore the economic impact on crime. The sole reason for that post is to spew out hate speech. As to why, I have no idea. About as bad is that /. still has that post listed. It clearly has nothing to do with the OP.
The mockup demo has so long a history that it qualifies as both "traditional" and "completely normal and expected".
I remember the first time I saw a Macintosh computer. It was on a table at the mall in front of the computer store running a word processing demo. See how nice it prints? See how nice the font looks? See how you cannot type anything in on the keyboard? What a useful computer!