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Nintendo's Switch Has Been Hiding a Buried 'VR Mode' For Over a Year (arstechnica.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Hackers have uncovered and tested a screen-splitting "VR Mode" that has been buried in the Switch's system-level firmware for over a year. The discovery suggests that Nintendo at least toyed with the idea that the tablet system could serve as a stereoscopic display for a virtual reality headset. Switch hackers first discovered and documented references to a "VrMode" in the Switch OS' Applet Manager services back in December when analyzing the June 2017 release of version 3.0.0 of the system's firmware. But the community doesn't seem to have done much testing of the internal functions "IsVrModeEnabled" and "SetVrModeEnabled" at the time. That changed shortly after Switch modder OatmealDome publicly noted one of the VR functions earlier this month, rhetorically asking, "has anyone actually tried calling it?" Fellow hacker random0666 responded with a short Twitter video (and an even shorter followup) showing the results of an extremely simple homebrew testing app that activates the system's VrMode functions.

As you can see in those video links, using those functions to enable the Switch's VR mode splits the screen vertically into two identical half-sized images, in much the way other VR displays split an LCD screen to create a stereoscopic 3D effect. System-level UI elements appear on both sides of the screen when the mode is enabled, and the French text shown in the test can be roughly translated to "Please move the console away from your face and click the close button." The location of the functions in the Switch firmware suggest they're part of Nintendo's own Switch code and not generic functions included in other Nvidia Tegra-based hardware.

6 of 38 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Who cares? by glitch! · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Seriously. The last time video games were interesting was before and a couple of years after the Nintendo 64 was released.

    I enjoyed Doom and Doom2 two and a half decades ago. Skipped Quake. Then got into Diablo2 a decade later. That lasted a couple years. In between, I played Civilization, Sims, and other popular games. I don't play now, but I would say all of those games are decent. And there must be many other great games I don't know about. It would be improper to condemn them because of shallow emotions or just lack of knowledge.

    --
    A dingo ate my sig...
  2. Re: Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Look. So edgy.

    There are plenty of perfectly fine video games out. Stop trying to play the oldschool cool bullshit.

  3. Re:Who cares? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You should try Doom2 again. Get Zandronum, load up DoomSeeker (included) find a Complex Doom Invasion server, let shit install, and jump in (don't forget to config both normal controls and CDI controls) and relive some awesome fucking times with a few nice updates.

  4. Nintendo did this before everyone else... by MobyTurbo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nintendo did this before everyone else, with the Virtual Boy.

  5. Re: Who cares? by bloodhawk · · Score: 2

    amusingly most gamers show more maturity than you and that is pretty sad state to be in. perhaps you should reflect on what that makes you if they are losers?

  6. Re:Who cares? by thegarbz · · Score: 2

    I'm sorry the happy person inside you died.

    In the meantime I am thorroughly enjoying the variety on the Switch, from the AAA titles, to the extensive independent market right along side the actual nostalgic titles that are available which you yourself seem to claim were interesting.