Virtual reality is one of those technologies that’s been lionized, demonized and romanticized endlessly over the years, but in the end, always seems to be a few years from becoming a widespread addition to our lives. I can recall playing with an acquaintance’s Nintendo Virtual Boy back in the mid-1990s, being amazed at scanning a 32-bit digital realm of reds and blacks that left me briefly feeling like Arnold’s T-800 … until I got bored with it and went outside to play instead.
Likewise, augmented reality has seemed to hover on the edge of widespread adoption, in search of both killer app and proper hardware. A decade back, I had an iPhone app which would display the direction and distance to all nearby New York City subway stops, enabling me to follow the proverbial yellow brick road to wherever I needed to go. It was fun, but only lasted a couple years — presumably due to the fact that most people are more used to following directions on, y’know, a map.
Products in the Guide
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Meta Quest 3 (128 GB)
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In the last few years, though, it’s been Mark Zuckerberg and the Facebook empire that have been trying the hardest to move the AR / VR ball downfield, even going so far as to rename the company “Meta” to stress its mission focus on the, ahem, metaverse.
The company’s latest device that attempts to take advantage of this potential future — assuming that ChatGPT and its successors don’t learn all our secrets and devour society before Zuck can get people fully invested in the metaverse — is the Meta Quest 3, the company’s first headset to include augmented reality features. Those are enabled in large part by the trio of blisters packing stereoscopic cameras and range-finding sensors on the front of the device, which both help the wearer see the world around them and help the device map out potential obstacles for when you’re immersed in your own personal holodeck simulation. (It’s also slimmer and sleeker than previous models.)
The Quest 3’s biggest rival will come next year, with the arrival of Apple’s hotly anticipated Vision Pro. Even so, the two will be far apart in a lot of ways: visual quality, design, ecosystem — and, most importantly, price. While Apple’s device starts at $3,499, the Quest 3 starts at $499.