VR headsets have had a shaky start despite their obviously awesome nature: Oculus has only sold around 200,000 headsets while the golden standard of VR, the HTC Vive, has shipped even less - around 160,000 units since launching in 2016.
One of the reasons that sales might not be rocketing through the roof is the HTC Vive’s relatively stringent specs list that asks users to have an Nvidia GeForce GTX 970 or AMD Radeon R9 290, and an Intel i5-4590 or AMD FX 8350 CPU.
But a new feature might just help you bridge the gap between your older hardware and that resource-hungry VR headset you’ve had your eye on: It's called Application Adjustment Resolution and it's available right now to try out in SteamVR.
Specifically, what the latest feature allows games on Steam to do is set custom rendering resolutions, separate of the headset’s own resolution.
In practice, that means you can render games at a lower resolution to be less hardware intensive - or, if your GPU isn’t hitting max capacity - request that the games be rendered at a higher resolution.
When is the Vive Pro coming out again?
Now, there could be any number of reasons why Valve is applying this update this week ... but, all things considered, it’s likely because the HTC Vive Pro is due out on April 5.
The Pro, which offers a higher native resolution of 2880 x 1600 could enable some really high quality performance for those of us with ultra-powerful rigs.
But, for those with less-than-gaming grade PCs or for pieces of resource-intensive content, the new update will allow your GPU to scale the resolution back to a more appropriate level.
The software update is just the first of many Valve has planned to coincide the release of the HTC Vive Pro, all of which can be obtained by opting into the SteamVR beta program located inside the system settings in Steam.
- Thinking about investing in VR? Here are the best VR headsets
March 31, 2018 at 02:44AM
Nick Pino
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar