The headset
For $199, the Oculus Go is a surprisingly well-designed piece of hardware that merges light gray plastics, breathable fabrics that contour to your face and spandex and mesh straps to hold it in place around head. Best of all, it weighs just over 1 lb, so wearing it for long bouts of time isn’t an issue as long as you adjust the headset straps — a process that took me at least 20 minutes of loosening, tightening and re-loosening to find the perfect fit.
Go sports a 5.5-inch LCD screen with 1080p visual quality and new optical lenses that enable the same wide field of view offered by previous Oculus headsets, but with reduced glare. There’s also a controller, powered by a AA battery, with a small circular trackpad to swipe in different directions, a trigger button, a Back Button and Home button. Meanwhile, sound is pumped out through two small speakers on the left and right side of the headset.
Under the hood: a Qualcomm Snapdragon 821 mobile chip which first debuted in 2016. It’s hardly cutting-edge in the graphics department (more on that later), but given the headset’s price and cord-free nature, we weren’t expecting anywhere near PlayStation 4-level eye candy here, and you shouldn’t either. That said, if the Nintendo Switch has proven anything, it’s that the absolute latest computing and graphics chips aren’t necessary to offer up some compelling entertainment. Translation: it’s the software that can make or break a hardware device.
The software
With over 1,000 apps and games at launch, Go already has a large selection for users to choose from — some new, others not-so-much. Many of them are casual “snack”-type experiences people can grok in a few minutes. A space shooter called “Anshar Wars 2” is probably one of the better examples of VR on Go. Best played while standing, users steer their ship by pivoting their head, while controlling and shooting enemies with the controller. It takes a little getting used to — particularly steering your ship by moving your head — but it’s a fully-immersive 360-degree experience that shows a little ingenuity on the developer’s part.
“Face Your Fears,” a series of horror gaming vignettes, also proved compelling. Each short episode capitalizes on a particular scenario gone horribly awry, like a plane flight or a romantic date. They’re short, mostly lean-back affairs, but oddly memorable.
Less enthralling were games like “Coaster Combat,” which has players shooting items while riding a roller coaster through virtual environments that wouldn’t look out of place on a PlayStation 2. (Indeed, what were supposed to be boulders on one level looked like simple blocks of virtual geometry covered in muddy brown textures.) I also noticed some weird graphical issues where some of the mountains in the background shimmered. Ultimately, the game was fun for the first 10 minutes, but forgettable.