• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    37 days ago

    Did this with a car once. It was a controlled enviroment, had one guy on an e-bike with the camera at the top of a poll and then I drove around the track with the headset on. Probably would’ve worked better if we’d gotten the tires aligned beforehand but it did work.

  • teft
    link
    1188 days ago

    I bet the lag would be worse than the perspective. Even a few dozen milliseconds is noticeable by some people and you’d feel drunk or nauseated.

    • @Retro_unlimited
      link
      258 days ago

      When I first started VR I would get sick, so I started to use it for 30 minutes at a time, then 1 hour, then more and more until I can handle 8 hours at a time (break at 4 hour mark). It just takes practice.

        • @Retro_unlimited
          link
          16 days ago

          My wife and I used to stream on twitch and we would stream 8 hours for 2 days a week.

          We did VR for a few months, I setup half the living room with green screen and used LIV software and a camera to put us inside the games.

          One of the times I was waving the controller and broke the ceiling light glass shade while live so that was exciting lol

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
        link
        fedilink
        98 days ago

        I do qa for VR headsets and have never gotten used to them. I’m at like three years of use as my job and still get nauseous

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          68 days ago

          did you grow up playing a lot of videogames? I have a theory that getting used to it while young has a big impact on how it’ll effect you later. My grandma can’t even look at Minecraft without getting sick and I can play VR for hours with nothing other than a bit of “woah no delay” for a few minutes

          • @captainlezbian
            link
            37 days ago

            I grew up on video games and have been getting high so slime rancher doesn’t make me sick

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          58 days ago

          Curious if you started with ‘intense’ experiences with artificial locomotion? IIRC if you have bad experiences while getting used to VR, your brain will associate the headset with nausea and it can be a vicious cycle.

        • @Retro_unlimited
          link
          38 days ago

          I do think I read that some people just can’t handle VR. No idea why. Hopefully you take brakes often and don’t get too sick.

      • @Maalus
        link
        -28 days ago

        Do not ever do this. VR for a person that doesn’t tolerate it can lead to days of feeling sick, nausea etc. Some people aren’t meant to play it. Listen to your body, when it tells you “I don’t feel so well” just stop. Otherwise you’ll lose a week of your life and be miserable, if not something worse.

    • @colderr
      link
      208 days ago

      I feel like after some time (and some throwing up) you’d maybe get used to it.

      • teft
        link
        208 days ago

        I bet the vast majority of people would get used to it. The human brain is wondrously plastic.

        If vision flipping goggles can be adapted to I bet this could too.

        I’m just one of those people who notice the lag so I’d be puking the whole time I was adapting.

        • Fushuan [he/him]
          link
          fedilink
          English
          10
          edit-2
          8 days ago

          Some years ago I got so drunk that had a 1-2 seconds visual delay, I vividly remember not being able to stop my friends from stealing my chips because I literally tried stopping them way too late. It was really funny tbh, damn.

          In any case, I never felt nauseated, my brain got accustomed to having a delay naturally.

        • Beacon
          link
          fedilink
          108 days ago

          I think the “adapted” state would feel like living with a chronic illness. You’ll still constantly feel nauseous and be puking, but you’d force yourself through doing basic life activities anyway

        • @colderr
          link
          38 days ago

          I get the getting used to lag part. But getting used to the whole world being upside down sounds insane.

          • Bilb!
            link
            fedilink
            English
            6
            edit-2
            8 days ago

            If you think about it, the perception of what is “right side up” is arbitrary. It’s like that cliche discussion of qualia and what if what I see as red is different from what you see as red.

            • @colderr
              link
              48 days ago

              Okay, that’s a fair point.

          • v_krishna
            link
            fedilink
            English
            28 days ago

            The lenses of your eyes already perceive the whole world upside down, your brain just flips it. If you wear glasses that invert it after a few days your brain will stop the flipping (and then if you take them off it’ll take a few days to re-flip).

            • @colderr
              link
              18 days ago

              Still sounds disgusting. Just thinking about trying to walk seems horrible.

  • kubica
    link
    fedilink
    428 days ago

    I’ve played enough racing games to say that the worse part about this is going to be when you have to go back to normality.

  • @Etterra
    link
    308 days ago

    By 7pm he was able to dodge roll through traffic.