

I tried it, it was cool, but I wouldn't play that way. It WILL work, but not well enough to play.maybe it's enough to "get an idea" of how VR would look, but I don't think it's a very good approximation. I think you misunderstood - that's exactly what I said. Then i would rather spare of for a real oculus. no i dont want trackIR and i know about it. if you havent seen the reveiws of the Gear VR experience you would know they are really reccomenders as starters to the VR world. If you want to know more of what im talking about watch this video.Īlso there is stil nice things to do with the Gear VR themselves. Im used to low framerates and i told im doing this to get an easy start into VR. Not even close to a real VR experience but give you some of the advantages VR offers - head tracking. TrackIR is $150 and you can hack one together yourself for about $30. If you really want a VR-like experience head tracking is the way to go.

A cool idea, but completely unusable to play the game. There is a freeware tool somewhere that let's you push VR to google cardboard but it's laggy, very low framerate, and doesn't really push actual rendered VR - just pseudo-3d but still flat-screen output. Doesn't have the framerate and the connection doesn't have the bandwith to push that much data.
