Home / Component / Virtual Reality / Carmack wants VR to stop ‘coasting on novelty’

Carmack wants VR to stop ‘coasting on novelty’

Virtual Reality has been in consumer hands for months now and while we have seen some impressive titles hit the likes of the Oculus Rift and HTC Vive, a lot of games have been shorter, demo-like experiences rather than full-blown titles that can match the scale of games not releasing on VR. This is something that John Carmack has noticed, as he urged developers to “be harder” on themselves and to stop letting VR “coast on novelty”.

At Oculus Connect 3 last week, John Carmack, Oculus's Chief Technical Officer came out to say: “We are coasting on novelty, and the initial wonder of being something people have never seen before. But we need to start judging ourselves. Not on a curve, but in an absolute sense. Can you do something in VR that has the same value, or more value, than what these other non-VR things have done?”

oculus_home_landing_main-1500x844

As GamesIndustry.biz points out, one sticking point for Carmack is loading times, saying that loading times should be limited to 20 seconds at most and even then, 20 seconds would be pushing it. He also brought up the need to improve user interface design. The talk wrapped up with one final call for developers to avoid the ‘allure of novelty'.

KitGuru Says: A lot of VR games right now are shorter titles and while there are some interesting standouts, VR headsets are a long way from being able to offer games on the same scale as what we can get on normal platforms, like the PC, or consoles. Hopefully that will start to change next year as more companies get involved in making games and the market starts to grow.

 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Bugsnax viertual reality

Bugsnax to get virtual reality mode on PC

In celebrating the game’s 4th anniversary, the team behind Bugsnax (Young Horses) have announced a free Virtual Reality update for PC.

One comment

  1. Aside from the price the main point that’s driving me away is that most the games are just gimmicky such as throwing you onto a pedestal and have enemies slowly come towards you. studios just need to figure out what can be done with a limited space and how that can be utilised for a set of fully fledged games.

    I for one would like to see a Hawken-esque game that puts you in the pilot seat of the mech, using your touch controllers to operate the various controls, levers and whatnot in the cockpit to move, aim and shoot