Oculus Go is a standalone $199 VR headset that doesn't need a PC, a phone, or wires

oculus go with controllerImage: Oculus

“The sweet spot.” It sounds like that’s going to be VR’s new focus, as we head into Oculus Connect’s fourth annual iteration. And what is that sweet spot, exactly? Not mobile VR, not PC-based VR, but a blend of both. No wires, but the same high-fidelity experience people get from the Oculus Rift.

That’s still probably a ways off, but Oculus took its first steps in that direction at Connect, announcing its new $199 Oculus Go headset, plus giving us our first look of the upcoming “Santa Cruz” prototype with inside-out position tracking.

Let’s dig in.

[ Further reading: HTC Vive vs. Oculus Rift vs. Windows Mixed Reality: What’s the difference? ]

Oculus Go revealed

Oculus Go is pretty easy to explain: Imagine Samsung’s Oculus-based Gear VR headset, but without needing a separate phone to power the experience. That’s it, really.

oculus go Oculus

And really that’s all Oculus needed. The $99 Gear VR is a great piece of hardware, but its audience was always limited by the pool of people who own a compatible Samsung Galaxy phone. Oculus Go broadens that audience significantly, and at $199 it’s set to be one of the cheapest VR headsets on the market when it releases in early 2018—and without wires tethering you to the PC.

Oculus Go also includes built-in audio, which is a definite improvement over Samsung Go. It’s not the same oversized on-ear headphones found on the core Oculus Rift, but there is support for spatial audio and the speakers look like they’re built into the headband. I’ve come to depend on built-in audio for VR—its convenience trumps the fidelity (but added clumsiness) of separate headphones.

oculus go spatial audio Adam Patrick Murray/IDG

Oculus Go.

Now, whether the experience will be as good as PC-centric VR? No way. The display is a bit better, coming in at 2560×1440 compared with the Oculus Rift’s 2160×1200, but this is still mobile VR at heart. Oculus even rammed that point home, announcing that Gear VR apps will be compatible with Oculus Go, using the same control schemes.

It’s also worth noting that Oculus Go doesn’t include position-tracking for either the headset or controllers—like Gear VR, this is head-tracking only. That means no room-scale, nor even the pseudo-room scale/standing experience you can get with the basic Oculus Rift + Touch package.

As I said, it’s a Gear VR without the need for an added phone. That’s definitely a good play for broadening VR’s audience, but we’re still talking entry-level.

Oculus Santa Cruz

oculus project santa cruz Oculus

The Oculus Santa Cruz prototype.

Then there’s Santa Cruz, which Oculus has deemed “the future” of Rift. Santa Cruz is the promised land, essentially—a standalone headset with the power of the Rift (or at least the Rift tethered to a low-end PC) and inside-out position tracking. It’s sort of like a blend of the Rift, Gear VR, and Microsoft’s upcoming slate of Windows Mixed Reality headsets.

First, some bookkeeping: Santa Cruz is still very much in the prototype phase, with dev kits sets to go out sometime next year. That’s about all we know though. Expect a full launch in late 2018 or even 2019 at the earliest.

Aside from being wire-free, Santa Cruz does make some improvements over similar systems—particularly Microsoft’s headsets. When I checked out Dell’s upcoming Windows Mixed Reality headset, I noted that hand tracking was particularly buggy. By using only two cameras, Microsoft’s headsets lose track of your hands any time they’re out of your immediate central vision.

oculus santa cruz sensors Oculus

The Oculus Santa Cruz uses four sensors in the headset instead of external base stations.

Santa Cruz uses four cameras, not two, and places them around the perimeter of the headset. Tracking is still concentrated in front of you, so this is certainly not as seamless as a base station system used by the Oculus Rift or the HTC Vive. Santa Cruz does track your hands when you reach up above your head though, for instance, as well as out to the sides a bit.

It’s hard to say how much you’ll notice the moments it doesn’t track—after all, your hands would be almost behind you at that point. We’ll need to get some hands-on time with the unit to test that functionality. Hopefully we can do that here at Connect today, though we’re not sure yet whether those prototypes are here on the show floor or not.

oculus santa cruz controllers Adam Patrick Murray/IDG

The redesigned Touch controllers for Oculus Santa Cruz.

Oculus also redesigned its Touch controllers to work with Santa Cruz, which might help. The large ring that used to go over your knuckles now protrudes above the thumb, presumably to aid tracking as you move your hands out to the sides or down to your waist. The new controllers also add a touchpad, a la the Vive—no surprise there.

Santa Cruz looks promising, at least on paper, though we haven’t gotten any word on specs, lenses, or any of the hardware central to making a PC-quality experience in a mobile form factor. We’ll update you as soon as we know more.

Oculus Rift?

oculus go 1 billion people Adam Patrick Murrary/IDG

And that’s it. No, really. If you were hoping for a refresh of the tethered Oculus Rift, well, you’re going to be waiting a while longer. Hell, with Santa Cruz on the horizon and Facebook’s “1 billion people in VR” pursuit, we might never see another high-priced and PC-centric VR headset from them again.

Mentioned in this article

Oculus Rift

Oculus RiftRead our reviewPrice When Reviewed:$499Best Prices Today:$599 at Amazon

On the plus side, Oculus Rift got a permanent price drop today. Yes, another. It’s now going to be sold for the special $399 price Oculus tested out in its Summer of Rift promotion this year. Sounds like that price did great for Oculus—the HTC Vive is still $599, which is a huge anchor around their neck at this point.

That’s it for Oculus Connect 4’s hardware news. Stay tuned however—we’ll be here all day checking out demos of both hardware and software, and will update if there’s anything particularly revolutionary.

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