The Oculus Quest 2’s lenses, for example, fog up like a sauna when warm, humid exhalation hits the cool lenses, causing a vision-impairing disaster for many VR gamers. Fortunately, PlayStation says its new headset design could potentially solve this frustrating problem.
PSVR 2 first look officially revealed — PS5’s next-gen VR headsetThe best VR-ready laptops of 2022Best gaming deals in February 2022
How PSVR 2 addresses the foggy lenses issue
The VR community offers many anti-fog solutions, including using a hairdryer on the headset to increase its temperature to prevent condensation during active VR sessions. Others suggest applying an anti-fog coating. Fortunately, Sony designed its new PSVR 2 headset to let users jump into gameplay without worrying about anti-fog solutions. Sony Senior Art Director Yujin Morisawa, leader of PSVR 2’s design team, said a vent was placed inside the head-mounted display to fend off the dreaded foggy lenses issue. “Our engineers came up with this idea as a good way to allow ventilation and avoid having the lens fog up while players are immersed in their VR games,” Morisawa said in a recent post for PlayStation Blog. The vent, located in a tiny space between the top and front surface of the scope, reportedly increases airflow inside the headset to forestall irksome, misty water droplets from collecting on top of the goggles. Morisawa insinuated that the engineering team tested this new vent-equipped headset design with a focus group and received positive feedback. “I hope our PlayStation fans will also agree [with the positive feedback], and I can’t wait for them to try it out,” Morisawa said. Meta, HTC and Valve better watch out! PSVR 2 is poised to launch with a slew of eye-catching features, including breathtaking visual fidelity in 4K HDR, top-of-the-line graphical rendering, upgraded tracking (e.g., inside-out camera tracking), and a new controller that adds a whole new level of immersion.