The Index controllers are never really out of the way for anything. And sliding them down your wrists is uncomfortable, awkward, not practical for all wrist sizes, etc.
I personally think the Index controllers are overhyped and terrible. They are awkward, didn’t live up to their promise for finger “tracking”, make your hands sweat, they are bulky, the straps are never quite the right tension, they had durability problems, etc etc.
I’m not sold on these, but I can see why others are. And why people in the club scene or who are performers would give them a shot.
I sure miss the original CV1 Touch controllers.
I want to start using this.
I knew this was Ian Bogost before I clicked the link.
That sounds icky in the hand…
Seems like ColorWare style painting is a better option. (But much more expensive.)
That’s sad to see. The broadening of VR is a real struggle right now.
They way they do light baking is pretty impressive for what it is.
I’ve never heard of it before either. It doesn’t seem weird to me. Just, the assertion that it’s overwhelmingly common does not sound right.
Thanks for sharing.
I’m sure stuff like this could be locked down via Enterprise deployment controls.
They are doing good! They just had their 17th birthday!
Best internet cat.
Damn. Thats impressive.
Yeah. It used EAC. EAC is supported on SteamDeck. They moved away from it.
Classic progress bar problems.
What five pieces of content that are available but not on PCVR do you think would stop the death of VR?
I suspect that device will always be too expensive, big, and loud for practical home use. I hope to be wrong.
The tech itself won’t go away and uses for it will be found.
What? Just slide them down your wrists. /s