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Review: HTC Vive is virtual reality the way you dreamed it would be

For decades, we’ve been told that virtual reality would one day transport us to alien worlds where we could perform incredible feats we’d only dream of doing in the real world.

We got a taste of that long-promised dream last month, with the release of Facebook’s Oculus Rift virtual reality headset. But as fantastic as the Rift is, there’s still a disconnect between your physical movements in the real world and the game world.

Enter the HTC Vive. Developed jointly by smartphone maker HTC and video game pioneer Valve, the Vive is a virtual reality headset that lets you explore virtual worlds by physically moving in this one.

Take a step to the right in your living room, and you’ll move to the right in virtual space. Jump, and you’ll jump on an alien moon. Duck down, and you’ll dip below a virtual work of art you’ve crafted out of fire.

This is the world of the Vive, and it is everything we were told virtual reality would be. But entering this virtual world has some drawbacks: namely an $800 price tag and the need for a whole lot of free space. So should you enter Vive’s world?

What you’ll need

Before you can even consider it, you’ll need a few things. Chief among them: a high-powered PC. Like the Oculus Rift, the Vive uses your computer to do all the heavy lifting when it comes to generating its virtual environments. In other words, if your PC struggles to run more than a few tabs in your Web browser, you’ll need to upgrade.

HTC and Valve recommend that your PC includes at least an Intel Core i5-4590 or AMD FX 8350 processor, an Nvidia GeForce GTX 970 or AMD Radeon R9 290 graphics card, and 4 GB of RAM. You’ll also need to be running at least Windows 7 or newer; Mac owners need not apply.

To buy a new PC with those kinds of specs, you’ll need to shell out about $1,000. That means you’ll have to drop about $1,800 to use the Vive — not exactly cheap.

The setup

There’s so much gear packed into the Vive’s box it felt like I was pulling open the freaking closet to Narnia. I ripped the box apart as soon as I got my Vive because I’m an impatient man-child, but when I looked around at the mess of wires and connectors at my feet, a cold chill ran down my spine.

This was going to be a nightmare to set up.

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But those initial appearances were deceiving. HTC and Valve have actually made the setup process for the Vive incredibly forgiving. You just have to download and install the Vive’s installation software from HTCVive.com, and it will hold your hand through the entire process.

The one issue you may run into is figuring out where to place the system’s included base stations. In order for the Vive to track your physical movements and then translate those into the virtual world, it uses these base stations to send out lasers that bounce off the Vive’s headset and wireless motion controllers.