Microsoft deprecated their VR framework (WMD), and therefore many VR headsets compatible with this standard are now effectively broken.

Luckily, the open source community has started reverse engineering the hardware and is now able to support most of these headsets through a project called Monado. Monado runs exclusively on linux at the moment.

Does anyone here have some experience with Monado? Is it worth getting a cheap VR headset and give it a try? I heard that it is still not very stable, but there isn’t much information available.

  • cron@feddit.orgOP
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    1 day ago

    Their changelog on one of their last releases says

    Added WinMR driver, it supports most headsets and controllers. Controllers can be connected both via host-Bluetooth and tunneled with the onboard radio chip. By default has 3DoF tracking, it can do 6DoF if used with the Basalt SLAM tracking software. Distortion is there but doesn’t work perfectly on all hardware, best results is on Reverb G2.

    This isn’t really understandable for me as a VR newbie ;)

    Edit: Maybe I’ll just get a Vive/Vive pro. They’re also cheap and probably enough to try it out without hours of hassle

    • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Well, that’s encouraging. I happen to own a Reverb G2 so maybe I should check it out and report back.

      Anyway, the 3DoF is three degrees of freedom, i.e. you can rotate your viewpoint on a fixed point in terms of pitch (up and down), yaw (side to side), and roll (tilt your head and look at things sideways and upside down). 6DoF adds the other three axes, i.e. in addition to all of the above you can also walk around and have a non-fixed viewpoint – which in terms of actual VR gameplay is almost certainly what you want. Enabling this via Basalt (there are two other SLAM options as well, apparently) is something I have no experience with.

      The WMR controllers are connected to your machine via Bluetooth and at least in the case of the Reverb G2, there is a built in Bluetooth receiver in the headset itself which in normal operation, i.e. in Windows, means the entire ensemble can act as a single all in one solution without having to use any additional outboard hardware. Unless there is some kind of technical reason not to I can’t see why you wouldn’t use it that way versus using a secondary Bluetooth dongle, but I haven’t tired recently either.

      Last time I looked the WMR support was in beta or something and it supported only the headsets, not the controllers. So at least this is progress.

      • cron@feddit.orgOP
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        1 day ago

        Thanks for your explanation! Please let me know if you succeed with your Reverb G2.