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European Hardware Association research shows declining interest in VR

This week, the European Hardware Association presented its 2017 buying trends research report, giving us a hint at what Europeans are most interested in tech-wise in 2017. While there has been growth and plenty of buyer intent as far as CPUs and GPUs go, it looks like interest in virtual reality has dipped a little bit since Q1 2016.

The EHA is a partnership spanning across multiple European tech sites including KitGuru. In total across all nine member sites the EHA has the ability to reach more than 20 million readers, which has helped in this market research. Over the last few months, the EHA has been surveying what technology readers are most interested in going into 2017 and what they plan on buying.

While back in Q1 2016 there was high interest in virtual reality across the board, in 2017 there is a slight decline and even lower buyer intent. As you can see in the graph above, there is still plenty of interest in traditional gaming and mobile devices but VR has dropped below Smart Home in terms of interest.

The second graph shows buyer intent across the 10,000 responses that the EHA received. While many are still planning on buying traditional gaming hardware or a mobile device, there appears to be little intent across those surveyed to actually adopt VR. Of those who responded, 40 percent had actually tried VR previously, so adoption could still happen but it seems not everyone is won over just yet.

One factor that is holding many readers back from adopting VR any time soon is the lack of ‘killer app'. There are some good games available on the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive but nothing truly Triple A like we see on traditional gaming platforms. Unfortunately, these huge games take years to produce and cost an awful lot of money to make and no one studio or brand has really stepped up just yet to bring that to market.

The second problem here is that killer apps don't tend to get made until hardware starts selling. If nobody is buying the hardware, developers have less incentive to truly invest on developing true, big budget games for VR headsets.

The full presentation will be made available for public viewing later this week for those interested but for now, this is a quick look at the EHA's findings as far as virtual reality is concerned.

KitGuru Says: I'm not too surprised that few people are planning on buying a VR headset this year. The technology still needs to mature a bit and many are waiting on second generation headsets before making the jump. Still, perhaps over time companies like Oculus and HTC will be able to win more people over, after all the VR market is still in its very early days. 

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4 comments

  1. Yep sounds about right. Pretty much what I have been saying all along. I would not say VR is dead but I do think they need that killer App and the hardware for the better VR systems to come down in price a bit then maybe it will take off. But yea CPU,Main board,Memory & Graphics card seem about right as well. We all know what is about to be released very soon so a lot of people may be thinking on getting that Shiny new Ryzen setup and then a beefed up graphics card before going the VR route.

  2. its just everyone preparing for when vr gets about 600 euro cheaper so that would end up at about 300 euro instead of 900 and they will finally be able to pay

  3. Brad Marcus Kirchhoff

    Once u actually get one u wont think its a gimmick. I know vr is the future of entertainment. No doubt about it. Just a matter of time before 75% of our lives have some sort of vr functionality to it. Ive been completely blown away since buying a psvr. The apps alone make the purchase worth it. Add in the early launch games and its easily worth the $500 full bundle price. Vr is here for the long run. Just let it takes it hold slowly and then out of nowhere vr will become mainstream.

  4. It’s a bit strange lumping VR together with CPUs, GPUs and SSDs, as the former requires the latter. One positive takeaway would be that if a lot of people intended on upgrading their core components, then that will make VR more accessible to the main market in the future. However, without a stand-out game in VR, then it will struggle to be seen as anything more than an alternative monitor.