There’s a lot of shared problems to work out

Speaking toGamesBeataboutProject Morpheusand virtual-reality gaming more generally, Sony’s Shuhei Yoshida had good things to say about Oculus VR. “When I look at VR, it’s still very early,” he said, drawing a comparison to the rise of real-time 3D rendering with the PS1. “It’s not even starting in a real way. When we launch Project Morpheus, or when they launchOculusas a consumer product, I can see another 20 years of progress for all kinds of things.”

Yoshida went on to say that on a technical level, “At this stage, we’re helping each other and trying to find solutions to a lot of problems that we’re trying to solve.” In terms of creating awareness, Sony has kept Morpheus mostly behind the scenes while Oculus created a proof-of-concept that let people realize VR is attainable. “That awareness and outreach to developers are really helping us as we introduce the Project Morpheus dev kit,” Yoshida said.

Article image

With two main platforms — Morpheus for PS4, and the Rift for PC — and more on the way, there’s the added benefit of reduced risk for game developers looking to support VR. And that’s what it’ll take to make these devices compelling — good games, “wherever they can come from.” Probably from indies. Yoshida is less concerned with attracting “big brands and successful games” as those don’t “transfer well” without spending significant time to create a new VR experience.

Virtual reality: Sony’s refreshingly honest thoughts on Oculus Rift, not needing triple-A, and similarities to the Wii U (exclusive)[GamesBeat]

A battle scene in Battlefield 6 Open Beta

capcom evo moment 37

GigabyteMon

A snap of the upcoming MESA update in PEAK

Naked Snake sneaking around in MGS Delta.

Battlefield 6 aiming RPG at a helicopter

BO7 key art

yordles animation still image

Milla Jovovich portraying Alice in Resident Evil 2002, wearing a red dress and holding a gun in her hand.