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[UploadVR] Next-Gen PlayStation VR Is 4K With Foveated Rendering And Vibration Feature

Excited for PSVR2?


  • Total voters
    254

Tygeezy

Member
It would be dumb for Sony to not give you option to play wirelessly. The tech is incredibly strong already and will be even better by the time this is ready.
I think the real play is to make it a hybrid headset just like the quest. Devs can easily port quest games over to a ps5 headset knowing it will have a big market and of course it could play psvr2 games either wired with usb, or wireless with a dongle, or using your home router/access point.

People could buy the headset and not even own a ps5 if they don’t have one which would give it a bigger market as well.
 

pr0cs

Member
I just can't see it having Foveated rendering, even Tobii eye tracking adds significant cost to headsets (as evidenced by the recent Pico Neo headset announcement). Foveated rendering still hasn't been done on any headset in any form beyond prototyping. I will happily eat crow and stand in line to get one if I'm wrong but I just don't see it.

Everything else sounds good, especially the controllers.
 

Bo_Hazem

Banned
I just can't see it having Foveated rendering, even Tobii eye tracking adds significant cost to headsets (as evidenced by the recent Pico Neo headset announcement). Foveated rendering still hasn't been done on any headset in any form beyond prototyping. I will happily eat crow and stand in line to get one if I'm wrong but I just don't see it.

Everything else sounds good, especially the controllers.

Sony is leading in imaging sensors mated with AI so they're mostly using their own tech in a lot of this:

Sony-Patent-New-1.jpg
 

Tripolygon

Banned
For data transfer sure. They could be keeping some secrets tho.

It is technically only 10 Gb/s for its function as a USB-C 3.2 Gen2x1 data transfer port. But it could have a higher bandwidth just for its use as a VR out port. Some people who looked at the PS5's SoC said the USB controllers appeared modified to support video out functionality.

Sony could be using something similar to VirtualLink:

"The available bandwidth is estimated to be equivalent to DisplayPort 1.4 (32.4 Gbit/s, up to 4K @ 120 Hz with 8 bpc color) for video and 10 Gbit/s of USB 3.1 Gen 2 data."


Notice how the PS5 uses 32 Gb/s for A/V and 10 Gb/s for data? Same as VirtualLink. Maybe not a coincidence?
You are right but VirtualLink is dead.
It would be speculation to suggest it’s capable of anything outside of the official specs. Virtual link also never caught on due to reliability issues.
Its not really speculation but more like common sense at this point. Its DisplayPort Altmode which works over USB connector. One of the earliest leaks of PS5 was the PCI ID associated with Ariel which showed 1 USB C with DP Altmode support.
 

hlm666

Member
It's when you lower the resolution away from the focal point, in headsets without eye tracking it means pixelated graphics when you are not looking straight ahead. But with the tracking it means you won't even notice it, literally free gpu power real-estate. Imagine something like a 20x graphics increase in VR

That number seems a little hopeful.

 

MagnesG

Banned
Aside from the user-friendly aspects, (compact, light, no cables, instant startup), VR won't just hold its place on the mainstream ecosystem until one of the platform holders goes all-in on the software, instead of treating it like a side peripheral.

Putting only a couple of AA games for the whole device lifespan won't matter much.
 

kyliethicc

Member
You are right but VirtualLink is dead.

Its not really speculation but more like common sense at this point. Its DisplayPort Altmode which works over USB connector. One of the earliest leaks of PS5 was the PCI ID associated with Ariel which showed 1 USB C with DP Altmode support.

"AMD’s own versions of the Radeon RX 6000-series cards include USB-C across the board, which, for VR in particular, would allow the cards to support the VirtualLink standard—a USB-C ‘alt-mode’ which was designed to provide VR headsets with data, power, and video through a single port.

Indeed, the company’s marketing says the port canpower head-mounted displays with just one cable for a modern VR experience,” though the timing is pretty odd given that the VirtualLink standard was initially introduced in 2018 and has since been abandoned. On the flip side, Nvidia was early with support for VirtuaLink by including USB-C ports on its first wave of RTX 20-series GPUs, only to eschew the power on the latest 30-series cards.

Still, as far as we know, a USB-C port on the RX 6000-series cards should mean that VirtualLink devices could work just fine, and headset makers could always devise their own single-cable headset connection based on the card’s USB-C port."




Interesting that AMD's brand new RX 6000 series GPUs seem to have USB-C VirtualLink support tho, perhaps specifically for VR headsets?

Maybe AMD and Sony have had some chats about the future of VR?

Maybe Sony's new headset could even be used by PC users with AMD 6000 GPUs? Would help Sony sell more headsets/games.
 
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Reallink

Member
So it's not 4K, it's 2K x 2K per eye--only slightly higher than Quest 2. I guess the blessing of such a low resolution is that if they've actually solved eye tracking and foveated rendering, VR games can probably come reasonably close to the fidelity of traditional 60FPS PS5 games. On the other hand, by the time it launches, PC HMD's and Quest 3 will probably have significantly higher resolutions, wireless solutions, sophisticated hardware based AI upscaling, and eye tracking--once again making PSVR the worst place to play.

Aside from the user-friendly aspects, (compact, light, no cables, instant startup), VR won't just hold its place on the mainstream ecosystem until one of the platform holders goes all-in on the software, instead of treating it like a side peripheral.

Putting only a couple of AA games for the whole device lifespan won't matter much.

It'll never be Sony or MS. Nintendo's the only company crazy enough to bet a whole generation and go all in on VR. They're also the only company with the franchise strength to turn a profit on AAA VR games even if the medium is largely and ultimately rejected. Sony betting the farm AAAA sad dad VR walking sims would sink them if they bombed, hundreds of millions lost. Meanwhile there is no chance a VR mainline Mario, Zelda, Mario Kart, Pokemon, or Animal Crossing would land in the red.
 
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kyliethicc

Member
It would be speculation to suggest it’s capable of anything outside of the official specs. Virtual link also never caught on due to reliability issues.
Here was the old leaked AMD testing data showing the same thing:

"Ariel" = PS5 APU (among other codenames)

"Ariel" chip has 2 USB-A 3.1 ports.. and a USB-C 3.1 port with DP Alt Mode..

Hmm.. PS5 also has 2 USB-A 3.1 ports and a USB-C 3.1 port..

Now why would the PS5 need a USB-C port with DisplayPort?

Sony have even said the front USB-A 2.0 port is for charging controllers, while the 2 USB-A ports on the back are for external storage and the new camera. But interestingly, Sony still have not said what that USB-C port on the front is for.. and none of their accessories use that port. Every PS5 accessory uses USB-A to connect to the console. I wonder why lol, its almost as if they know that port will need to be used for something else.

I'm not saying Sony will actually use the VirtualLink branding, but their own custom version. VL used 32 Gb/s for A/V and 10 Gb/s for USB, over a Type-C connection. And the PS5 SoC is capable of 32 Gb/s for A/V via its HDMI port, and 10 Gb/s for USB via its ports. So the system could simply switch on a displayport mode for its USB-C port, and send its A/V signal @32 Gb/s out to the headset via the USB-C port instead of via its HDMI port. It would allow Sony to send a 4k@120 signal and power and data along a single cable to the headset, as they have said it will be, all by using the conveniently placed port on the front of the console.




show images of the data
g5UQwVx.jpg

iqc4UAu.jpg

n6FRPhb.jpg

4ueLJII.jpg


Here is someone disecting the PS5 SoC and saying it's DisplayPort via USB capable.

4oP71OU.jpg
 
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Mark Zuckerberg said recently “some other folks might try to ship something that they claim is higher quality but has a wire, and I just don’t think that consumers are going to want to go for that.”
eat shit, fitness minigames fan :messenger_tears_of_joy:

Sony will use that wire to chokehold the Quest. To be fair, they're not competing, they're really different markets - one for fitness/social casual gamers, the other for hardcore enthusiasts who value their money and time enough not to bet on hackland pc.

once psvr2 is actually revealed along with a killer lineup, Zuck will be forever alone in Echo Arena fighting bots...
 

CloudNull

Banned
Here was the old leaked AMD testing data showing the same thing:

"Ariel" = PS5 APU (among other codenames)

"Ariel" chip has 2 USB-A 3.1 ports.. and a USB-C 3.1 port with DP Alt Mode..

Hmm.. PS5 also has 2 USB-A 3.1 ports and a USB-C 3.1 port..

Now why would the PS5 need a USB-C port with DisplayPort?

Sony have even said the front USB-A 2.0 port is for charging controllers, while the 2 USB-A ports on the back are for external storage and the new camera. But interestingly, Sony still have not said what that USB-C port on the front is for.. and none of their accessories use that port. Every PS5 accessory uses USB-A to connect to the console. I wonder why lol, its almost as if they know that port will need to be used for something else.

I'm not saying Sony will actually use the VirtualLink branding, but their own custom version. VL used 32 Gb/s for A/V and 10 Gb/s for USB, over a Type-C connection. And the PS5 SoC is capable of 32 Gb/s for A/V via its HDMI port, and 10 Gb/s for USB via its ports. So the system could simply switch on a displayport mode for its USB-C port, and send its A/V signal @32 Gb/s out to the headset via the USB-C port instead of via its HDMI port. It would allow Sony to send a 4k@120 signal and power and data along a single cable to the headset, as they have said it will be, all by using the conveniently placed port on the front of the console.




show images of the data
g5UQwVx.jpg

iqc4UAu.jpg

n6FRPhb.jpg

4ueLJII.jpg


Here is someone disecting the PS5 SoC and saying it's DisplayPort via USB capable.

4oP71OU.jpg

I love my Quest but if Sony pulls this off WITH wireless functionality I will drop it so fast. Add that with the rumors that epic offered to make a Sony exclusive launch title for PSVR2 and we might be getting more AAA vr titles. We need more games like Half Life Alyx.
 

YukiOnna

Member
Quite a big jump from previous PSVR. It'd be cool if it had direct PC support and, more than anything, if the Japanese title support for this is good, I'll definitely jump on it. I just hope it's priced the same as Quest 2 rather than on the higher end.
 

SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
hopefully they’ll be able to utilize the eye tracking tech to increase performance because hard to see the ps5 running 4K vr at 90fps and above without some sacrifices in fidelity
That's what foveated rendering is. It allows them to adjust the resolution based on your gaze and save a lot of rendering time.

It's a big deal, it will mean VR titles will be able to get a lot closer to looking as high quality as non-VR titles and should also make it easier to make games that crossover and look good in VR or 2D.

It's a solid differentiator from the PC and standalone VR marketplace if it works well.
 

SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
Will it compare to my valve index? Find out on the next episode of...
I would think the performance gains of foveated rendering, plus the possible design advantages of gaze tracking would make it a solid step up from Index in some important ways.

Quest 2 is getting people used to wireless, so that might be a step back though.
 
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THE DUCK

voted poster of the decade by bots
Foveated rendering is cool, the adaptive triggers, etc. The vibrating headset.....not so sure about that, hard enough to keep the thing in place. Disappointed in the resolution, big step up from psvr, but no better than what's currently on the market, and it's not out for another year.......1080p overall just isn't enough to take vr to the next level.

That said, I'll probably still buy it and have fun with it.
 

Tygeezy

Member
eat shit, fitness minigames fan :messenger_tears_of_joy:

Sony will use that wire to chokehold the Quest. To be fair, they're not competing, they're really different markets - one for fitness/social casual gamers, the other for hardcore enthusiasts who value their money and time enough not to bet on hackland pc.

once psvr2 is actually revealed along with a killer lineup, Zuck will be forever alone in Echo Arena fighting bots...
What’s a game for hardcore enthusiasts anyway? A game with a high budget and hours of cut scenes if we’re lucky we can skip? Lower budget games have frankly put a lot of AAA games to shame recently.
 

SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
Foveated rendering is cool, the adaptive triggers, etc. The vibrating headset.....not so sure about that, hard enough to keep the thing in place. Disappointed in the resolution, big step up from psvr, but no better than what's currently on the market, and it's not out for another year.......1080p overall just isn't enough to take vr to the next level.

That said, I'll probably still buy it and have fun with it.
Resolution is what it is likely because of the needs of mass producing the headset. Custom displays at some peculiar resolution are likely to limit supply and/or drive up costs.

That said, if you've actually used headsets like the Reverb G2, it actually looks damn good and if foveated rendering allows them to really take advantage of that res (and maybe even super-sample at center vision) you're not going to be thinking about resolution.
 

THE DUCK

voted poster of the decade by bots
Resolution is what it is likely because of the needs of mass producing the headset. Custom displays at some peculiar resolution are likely to limit supply and/or drive up costs.

That said, if you've actually used headsets like the Reverb G2, it actually looks damn good and if foveated rendering allows them to really take advantage of that res (and maybe even super-sample at center vision) you're not going to be thinking about resolution.

It would have to be a big jump from quest 2 (my understanding is g2 is close) because I'm definately still thinking of resolution - the end product just can't look as real as it needs to to take that next step, when everything is limited by resolution - very much like 1080p vs 4k, but with a 80 or 90" screen. It makes a huge difference in larger screen sizes, which is effectively what a vr headset is doing, the equivalent of very large screen. Resolution matters. Also a 4k per eye screen would open it up to play 2d games on without sacrifice.
 

muteZX

Banned
foveatedpt2-hero__header__5ce790ce.jpg



If this is true and the PS VR2 will support foveated rendering, it will bring a huge advantage, as the PS5 can render a high resolution image around 4K, which would not otherwise be possible with its GPU.


It's similar to VRS. Foveal area has 1x1 or supersampled, better than 1x1 shader quality ratio /high resolution/, Blend 2x2 /mid resolution/, Peripheral 4x4 /low resolution/ ..
 
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THE DUCK

voted poster of the decade by bots
foveatedpt2-hero__header__5ce790ce.jpg



If this is true and the PS VR2 will support foveated rendering, it will bring a huge advantage, as the PS5 can render a high resolution image around 4K, which would not otherwise be possible with its GPU.


It's similar to VRS. Foveal area has 1x1 or supersampled, better than 1x1 shader quality ratio /high resolution/, Blend 2x2 /mid resolution/, Peripheral 4x4 /low resolution/ ..

A smooth 90 or 120hz 4k image that it will then effectively downscale to 1080p per eye. Sucks but true.
 

muteZX

Banned
A smooth 90 or 120hz 4k image that it will then effectively downscale to 1080p per eye. Sucks but true.

We will see, paradoxically, but especially with VR, very high frames above 90hz /optimally at least 120hz/ are perceived better than the image resolution itself. It is important now to keep the VR alive and gradually get to the 8K / 240Hz display, excellent optics, great controls and wireless of course.
 

Tygeezy

Member
speak for yourself

once psvr2 is here this is where I'm living:


I’m getting a psvr 2 as well. I just believe the thinking that AAA games are all the matter is a false premise when lower budget titles have frankly been better lately than a lot of AAA output.
 

CrustyBritches

Gold Member
What’s a game for hardcore enthusiasts anyway? A game with a high budget and hours of cut scenes if we’re lucky we can skip? Lower budget games have frankly put a lot of AAA games to shame recently.
He means games like Asgard's Wrath and Half-Life Alyx, but made for PlayStation instead of dirty ol' PC.

VR is like Wii or 3DS. What works on systems like this isn't the same as just adding VR mode to modern flatlander games. IMO, that's the opposite of what makes VR cool. Unless we're talking racing/flying/sim games that are a natural fit.

RDR2 in VR would be janky and exhausting.
 

Tygeezy

Member
He means games like Asgard's Wrath and Half-Life Alyx, but made for PlayStation instead of dirty ol' PC.

VR is like Wii or 3DS. What works on systems like this isn't the same as just adding VR mode to modern flatlander games. IMO, that's the opposite of what makes VR cool. Unless we're talking racing/flying/sim games that are a natural fit.

RDR2 in VR would be janky and exhausting.
Yeah, I just don’t buy that oculus is nothing but mini games and fitness games for “filthy casuals.” There are AAA experiences to be had, admittedly more via link/airlink, but there are several excellent low budget titles I’m frankly having more fun with than their AAA counterparts. In death unchained, Demeo, Ancient Dungeon immediately come to mind in vr, and a game like Vailheim I’ve had more fun with than flat screen AAA titles.
 

Panajev2001a

GAF's Pleasant Genius
The resolution is a big jump from PSVR (and there is a nice FOV increase too), but what excites me is that looking at the target resolution 60-90 Hz targets and taking eye tracking based foveated rendering we should get visuals much much closer to how they look on PS5 on your average TV… and the controllers are so much better for VR too!
 

mitchman

Gold Member
The fact that Sony never offered an updated breakout box that supported HDR on the PS4 Pro, made PS VR an unused item for me pretty fast. Yeah, I know I can use a switch and all that, but I just couldn't be bothered. Oculus Rift S just works and has much better tracking of the controllers. If this is really good, I might give it a go, though.
 

TonyK

Member
If it reduces motion sickness (ex. syncs the sound of footsteps/image movement with actual physical input), you might not want to do that.
Do you think that's possible? I experienced VR sickness multiple times and I can't imagine how vibration could mitigate that.

I mean, I have motion sickness going in car or bus if I'm reading because vehicle movement doesn't align with my sight, focused in a book, phone, whatever. In VR, motion sickness is produced by the opposite: your eyes see movement but your body doesn't feel it. I think vibration in head can't supply real movement. I could feel vibration steps in the controller and be sick, because that's not real movement, it's more an information for the senses, more like sound than movement. I don't think putting vibration in the helmet will help to fool the body to believe there is real movement. But I would be incredible glad if I was wrong.
 

Rudius

Member
To be clear: PSVR has a 1080p screen divided by 2, a bit over 2 million pixels in total, 1 million per eye. PSVR2 is rumored to have 8.2 million pixels in total (about the same as a 4K screen), making it 4 million per eye. So the perceived different should be about the same as going from a 1080p TV to a 4K one, siting really close to the screen, or going from 240p (PS1/Saturn resolution) to 480p (DC/PS2 Era, although most people had 480i tvs and not all games supported progressive scanning). It's also the same jump from the 720p of PS360 to the 1440p common on PS4 Pro.
 
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SF Kosmo

Al Jazeera Special Reporter
It would have to be a big jump from quest 2 (my understanding is g2 is close) because I'm definately still thinking of resolution - the end product just can't look as real as it needs to to take that next step, when everything is limited by resolution - very much like 1080p vs 4k, but with a 80 or 90" screen. It makes a huge difference in larger screen sizes, which is effectively what a vr headset is doing, the equivalent of very large screen. Resolution matters. Also a 4k per eye screen would open it up to play 2d games on without sacrifice.
Quest 2 has a fairly high resolution, a little less than this, but you've probably never played anything actually running at that native res (because it requires a certain amount of overdraw to compensate for distortion), so it's not really being used to it's full advantage. Most Quest 2 apps run well below native and even on Link with PC games, you need a beast of a PC to crank those Link settings up to their max res in most titles.

So that's what I'm saying. If foveated rendering lets them really push resolution it's going to look really nice.
 
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Rudius

Member
It would have to be a big jump from quest 2 (my understanding is g2 is close) because I'm definately still thinking of resolution - the end product just can't look as real as it needs to to take that next step, when everything is limited by resolution - very much like 1080p vs 4k, but with a 80 or 90" screen. It makes a huge difference in larger screen sizes, which is effectively what a vr headset is doing, the equivalent of very large screen. Resolution matters. Also a 4k per eye screen would open it up to play 2d games on without sacrifice.
It's not all about the screen, but also the hardware powering it. The Quest 2 is still less powerful than a PS4 and a Quest 3 can't be much better running on a battery, even at 5nm. PS5 can run Resident Evil 8 at 4K60 with power to spare (ray tracing disabled); GT7 was running at 4K60. Those graphics on the equivalent of a 4K panel will be a sight to behold.
 
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