Oculus Quest 2 Review - 100 Hours Later

by - janeiro 27, 2022

Oculus Quest 2 Review - 100 Hours Later

Oculus Quest 2 Review - 100 Hours Later



[Music] [Applause] [Music] [Applause] [Music] what's up and welcome to another episode of gizmo slip tech today we're taking a look at the oculus quest 2. this is my detailed review of it after a hundred plus hours of use i have been using this every day for like over two hours on average since i got it now oculus quest 2 is a headset that people either swear by saying it's the very best most versatile headset that you can buy or it's an absolute heaping pile of trash because it's made

ultimately by facebook or oculus but it's really owned by facebook and as you know facebook is trying to collect all the data it can on us so it can monetize us to the best of its ability so where do i fall in all of this do i recommend buying a quest to is it worth the privacy invasion is it actually a fully featured fully capable headset compared to the oculus quest one without further ado let's dive into it here we go now i gotta give a big shout out to our sponsor for this episod e into the

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some quality made nice t-shirts at a reasonable price go check it out there's a link in the description down below they have a sale going on for the next few days totally worth picking yourself up some nice shirts so how does the oculus quest 2 stand up versus the competition well simply put the number one reason to buy the quest 2 or quest 1 really is because it has a fully standalone vr headset you don't need anything else besides this and the controllers an d you can have a great time in vr

virtually all the other headsets out there require you to plug your vr headset into a pc to stream the high quality visuals from your powerful graphics card on your pc now since the vast majority of people do not have powerful gaming pcs that means they will never be able to enjoy a pc vr headset but they can pick up a quest too and have a fully immersive vr experience now when you use a vr headset you can have inside out tracking like we have came ras here on the quest 2 that track the

controller movements and they can also track hand movements as well setting up the quest 2 is very simple all you have to do is find the ground level and then outline the player area where it's safe to play now personally what i do is i mark the play area that's actually much bigger around me because i don't like having the guardian walls appearing in the middle of the vr but i'm just very very aware of my vr space now this has led to s ome injuries but i think it allows for a much better overall

vr experience now if you take a system like the valve index which is arguably the best competitor to the quest 2. you have to have those external sensors which is a more complex setup and it'll run you a thousand dollars for a full bundle which is a lot of money compared to a 300 fully complete standalone setup that's just easier to set up and take with you anywhere you want to go now how does the quest 2 stack up with the q uest 1 well if you look at the specs the quest 1 has a resolution of

1440 by 1600 per eye but it is an oled display the quest 2 has a resolution of 1832 by 1920. so that means the quest 2 has 52 more resolution to work with than the quest one i know it doesn't seem like the numbers are that different but when you multiply them out the the difference in numbers become exponential therefore small differences matter a lot more when it comes to resolution in addition we have a 90 hert z refresh rate on the quest 2 versus a 72 hertz refresh rate on the quest 1.

now keep in mind that not all vr games on the quest 2 will be in 90 hertz that's gonna be up to developers and honestly up to oculus also allowing the developers to turn those features on and off and the tricky part about the 90 hertz for 72 hertz is that if you enable 90 hertz at all the games what you're going to have is significantly reduced battery life because the gpu in the quest 2 is going to h ave to work a lot harder to push that kind of frame rate out to the system and this is a battery

powered system fully standalone so you might go from two and a half hours of battery life to less than two hours of battery life if you change just the refresh rate on a game now when it comes to the processor we're dealing with snapdragon 835 on the quest one and a snapdragon xr2 on the quest 2. and keep in mind xr2 is dramatically more powerful for both video rendering and just general u sage so that means the quest 2 has a lot more potential hardware power which honestly is not even being

harnessed that much yet aside from the resolution increase because we're dealing with 52 more resolution which means it's literally 52 more powerful just to run the same frame rate and the same exact games so the quest 2 does have a massive visual improvement due to its processor but this is not even the limit here like there's a lot more i think the xr2 processor can add to th e vr experience but that's going to again be up to developers and you have to trade off with increased graphics with

reduced battery life now i was actually playing one of these vr games and i happened to play a match with a developer of the game and he was explaining that oculus is not allowing them to make these features user options like if the user could switch between 72hz and 90hz it would be nice because they then they can choose would they rather have more battery life or a faster refresh rate and you got to keep in mind that a higher refresh rate is going to make a bigger difference in titles with

fast action think like beat saber when you're you're swinging the sword so fast you got to track all these things coming at you and you gotta swing if you have 90 hertz it does add to the experience more than other games that are slower paced that the difference in refresh rate just doesn't make as big of a difference basically what i would love to see i s that developers and oculus will allow us to choose whether we want to be in 72 hertz or 90 hertz for each specific game would you rather have

the battery life or would we rather have the refresh rate and i think i would generally pick refresh rate most of the time unless i knew that i wasn't going to be able to charge the quest 2 for a while the key to any gaming system whether it's a console a pc or a vr system is honestly the games when i started using my quest 1 which i have rig ht here will have a third party a head strap that basically zooms in on your head there um when i started using the quest one you know i was impressed with

a handful of games there's a lot of really cool vr experiences on the quest one but realistically there was only a handful of vr titles that were truly compelling to me and the main one really was beat saber when it was initially released well since then we've had over a year of development of games and it has really paid off we h ave so many great titles now available on the oculus quest store i wanted to talk about a handful of these my favorite picks so far that i have played first of all my

number one game is blast on blast on is this one-on-one competitive pvp shooter dodgeball game basically it's a one-on-one experience where you have a set of weapons that will spawn you grab the weapons you shoot them at your opponents the bullets travel fairly slow allowing you to dodge the enemy bullets and they can also kind of dodge your bullets too and there's all these different strategies you can set up traps on certain parts and then shoot them faster on this side and you've got lasers

and you've got these big glowing orb ball things that you have to dodge and you've got grenades you can throw and you can time and you can counter and you have shields and it's just a really complex really satisfying game to improve at and get better at it's my favorite pvp oriented game on the quest and i am a pvp oriented player in general and that makes this my number one game for the oculus quest i highly recommend it it's only ten dollars super great game my number two game

is population one this is a battle royale again a competitive shooting game uh which not everyone's a competitive shooter type person but i am so this is my number two game we've got excellent design and implementation here you can climb on anything you can fly off structures you can build your own walls you can climb up those walls you can use snipers shotguns assault rifles there's a variety of weapons it's a really well developed game but i do wish they had higher player counts inside of each

individual match because there's only a total of 18 players in one match overall population one is a complete battle royale experience and it's the best one i think so far for vr and honestly playing it on the quest is probably the best way to play it because you're constantly turnin g and moving around and wanting to climb things and get down low and stand up it's there's a lot of nice things about having that be on the quest highly recommend population one number three we've got 11 table tennis

i'm a huge fan of table tennis in real life i used to play every single day at my old job my manager and i would just go crazy playing ping pong one probably should have been working a little bit more but it was great it was awesome it was great bonding time and it was su per fun this game translates the real world game and the skills you have in the real world into the game so well that like the same mistakes i make in real life table tennis i make in the game like the same types of spins same

cuts that they say they fall short on the net you wouldn't think that it'd be possible to translate the game so well into vr but it is incredible the other great thing about this game is that their matchmaking for multiplayer is simple it's quick and it works really well you have voice chat so it's a great way to meet people and just socialize and have fun my number four game we have pistol whip this is a musical shooting game where you dodge incoming bullets while the same time taking out bad

guys and whipping pistols into bad guys to kill them it's a super fun arcadey musical rhythm game that i highly recommend checking out number five until you fall this is a roguelite rpg sword slasher game where you have to time your sword strikes a nd blocks to be able to counter your opponents it can get very intense and very satisfying when you survive these intense moments where you've timed your swords just right and managed to take down the enemies i highly recommend checking that out

and it's a very good implementation on the quest 2 in particular there's a ton of other vr games out there like moss beat saber and of course these are just the games available through the oculus store not to mention all the games that you can get for pc vr and stream using a usb cable to your headset alternatively you can use virtual desktop to wirelessly stream games from your gaming pc to your headset and yes this does work really well as long as you have a strong wi-fi connection with a high

enough bandwidth and a good gaming pc if you have a good enough connection it feels like you're actually running the game on the headset or you're directly wired in but you're actually fully wireless allowing you to have mor e immersion more movement while playing vr which i absolutely love look at this game of half-life alex the graphics are insane it's really impressive really immersive and that's the great thing about wirelessly streaming these games is if you have a good connection if you

have a good pc it really doubles or triples the library size of your vr games that you can play but of course you'll need a gaming pc to be able to do that now because these quest games are stripped down to be ab le to run on a smartphone processor and gpu sometimes the graphics are not as high as on the pc version i'd say most of the time there are reduced textures and reduced post-processing effects but the good news here is that the core gameplay remains the same making the experience still

just as fun in my opinion while at the same time allowing you to have the truly wireless freedom to be able to turn completely around and look up and down and dive up and down without running into a c able or tripping over it or getting caught up in it which happens all the time with a wired vr headset now i do want to mention that facebook recently started requiring users to use a facebook account to log into the oculus store to be able to basically get started using their oculus quest 2. there

was a lot of lash back against facebook for this fact so what do i think about this here's my thought facebook has owned oculus since 2014. if you were okay buying an oculus rift or an ocu lus quest before this point they have all the data that they were ever going to collect on you anyway like even if you didn't use a facebook account to do it oculus was still owned by facebook so they still had access to all the data that they wanted on you if they wanted to actually use it so in my mind this

whole thing of requiring a facebook login doesn't really affect me at all what difference does it make in the long run anyway one of the reasons facebook is able to sell the qu est to at 299 dollars in the first place is because they will take and use this data to try to monetize it to try to sell you vr games that you truly love both on the platform and off the platform so just know that that that's going to be happening if you get any kind of a facebook product ever basically they're going

to try to utilize all the data they have on you to sell you stuff facebook's whole gambit here is that they're going to be able to utilize the data that they collec t off the users to help subsidize the cost of the device and then also turn and sell vr games from their app store to you to be able to again subsidize the cost of the device because i don't think facebook is making money on these devices at 300 they're probably just about cutting even which is a very scary idea from someone trying to

develop and sell hardware so they're basically relying on users to actually get the quest to and then buy games from the app store to counter the low co st of entry now another hidden feature that a lot of people don't know about the quest 2 is that you can side load apps using a app called sidequest which basically you take your headset and you hook it up to a actual pc and then the pc basically can allow you to download lots of different apps adjust settings that normally would be off limits

and even allow you to increase the graphics in some games like turning on 90 hertz refresh rates now overall i've been playing the quest for one two three or four hours a day probably on average about one and a half hours a day primarily playing games that are both fun and also burn calories they get my heart pumping like blast on 11 table tennis until you fall uh there's lots of games out there beat saber synth wave pistol whip there's so many games that burn calories and they're so fun i'd i

love this as a tool for staying in shape and burning calories and especially in the middle of this pandemic you can do really co ol things all through the vr environment now what are some cons for this device first of all the 72 hertz refresh rate on most games is not a problem i think for most games but do know that some games play a lot better at 144 hertz refresh rate like on the valve index like if you're playing a competitive first person shooter like onward or pavlov having 144

hertz refresh rate is going to give you a competitive advantage you'll be able to you'll be able to react faster and not get quite as much motion sickness when you're doing those fast reactions now another con for the quest 2 is that when i was trying to find the visual sweet spot and the visual sweet spot for each person is a little bit different so there's a couple different things first of all you need the headset the right distance from your face and you need it to stay in that spot without

you know tilting forward or tilting backward or coming too close or sliding left and right and then it s tarts looking awkward so getting that just right sweet spot can be tricky on some headsets especially depending on which strap you have now i have just been using the default strap but the key i've found to getting the best placement is first of all i put my head up to the quest then i pull the strap back when you're initially trying to find the comfort point you want to loosen this up and

just kind of pull it out now you let this strap kind of relax backwards a bit and the key is you want this front headset to be flush against your face and you want to tighten this back strap this horizontal strap you want to be able to basically situate it perfectly in the right spot and once you've got it set to the right spot then you tighten this up so that it's just taut and then that is what keeps the quest 2 in the perfect spot and i can maintain this sweet spot basically indefinitely and

i really really like it overall it's been staying in the sweet spot better than the quest one did even though i got a third party halo strap here this is a really nice head strap makes it more comfortable arguably because the the pressure on your head goes around the top of your head rather than kind of mainly being on the front face of your head that said this doesn't quite stay perfectly in the sweet spot as often like i kind of have to wiggle it around and make sure it stays in the sweet

spot all the time which can be a bit tricky it's still not bad like this this still works pretty well the main thing is the quest 2 does have a better sweet spot once you figure out how to hit it consistently now another key to clearly viewing vr content is how wide apart the lenses are you want the lenses to be the right distance apart for your eyes so that you can look through the lenses clearly and the trick with the oculus quest 2 is that they have a series of jump points so you can go like

wide medium and narrow and i'm kind of in between two of the points so initially the ipd was not very good but i found that if you hold the lenses carefully and move them gradually you can get them to stay in between two of the jump points which was crucial for me to have perfect ipd adjustment so know that a lot of reviewers aren't really talking about this but i've been able to get it to be an in-betweener no problem overall at 299 the quest 2 is just such a great deal i freaking love it i

can't recommend it enough to people it's the games are so good in vr now there's gonna be a game for sure that you're gonna love and you're gonna want to spend hours and hours and hours in it i think the fact that this is even cheaper than the quest one makes it an incredibly attractive offer there's just so much you can do with the vr headset these days you can watch netflix or amazon prime you can hang out with people watching movies you can hang out with random people watching random movies

you can browse the web and watch

Oculus Quest 2 Review - 100 Hours Later




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