Skip to main content

Excedrin’s Migraine Experience lets you have a migraine via virtual reality

Living vicariously by way of virtual reality is generally regarded as a pleasant experience. Can’t get to that Ikea showroom? No worries, we’ll bring it to you. Want to climb Machu Picchu from your living room? Step right up. But because we just can’t keep nice things nice for too long, Excedrin asked a different question — want to experience the debilitating effects of a migraine? No? Too late — Excedrin’s migraine simulator is already here.

Perhaps one of the first simulators to cause wearers to feel discomfort, the point of the VR experience, Excedrin says, is to help non-migraine sufferers better comprehend the extent of the condition. While 36 million Americans are affected migraines, Excedrin claims, “Migraines are still widely misunderstood — largely because those who don’t experience the condition can’t fully understand it.”

As such, the pain pill company used a cutting edge virtual reality platform to create “an immersive experience that replicates common migraine symptoms, such as light and sound, disorientation, and aura (visual disturbances, sometimes manifesting as spots or jagged edges).” Each migraine simulated by the VR platform was customized to the unique experience of a patient, and then, friends and family members were invited to try on the headset in hopes of eliciting a sense of empathy. Needless to say, the simulator proved pretty effective in that regard.

Diana Crandall of the New York Daily News tried the simulator on for herself, an experience that she called “nearly unbearable.” Even while sitting, she wrote, “I couldn’t compose a text message, let alone scroll through a newsfeed. I sat helplessly trying to make a phone call.” And when she tried to walk, things got even worse. “I staggered down my office hallway in a seemingly drunken stupor, grasping at walls to try and steady my steps,” Crandall said. “I could barely focus on putting one foot in front of the other, making talking while walking akin to a mission impossible.”

If you’re feeling particularly masochistic, the Migraine Experience app will be available for download in May, and if you’ve got a Google Cardboard, you can give yourself a migraine and see what it’s like firsthand, all thanks to the magic of virtual reality.

Editors' Recommendations

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
Amazon’s new AR app lets you have fun with all those Prime Day boxes
amazons new ar app offers interactive fun with its boxes amazon augmented reality

Try a spooktaculAR experience this Halloween

The online shopping frenzy that is Amazon Prime Day is pretty much upon us again, with customers around the world gearing up to splash the cash on all manner of cut-price goodies.

Read more
Amazon introduces Explore virtual experiences platform
amazon introduces virtual experiences platform explore

Amazon’s new Explore platform offers virtual experiences from around the world to explore a new place, learn a new skill, or shop at unique boutiques. 

The new platform connects you with one-on-one sessions with an instructor, tour guide, or personal shopper to virtually provide you a personalized and unique experience. 

Read more
Amazon’s new AR tool lets you fill a room with multiple virtual items
amazons new ar tool makes furniture shopping easier amazon room decorator

Shoppers who go online in search of furniture may be interested in a new offering from Amazon.

The e-commerce giant is rolling out a new augmented reality (AR) tool, currently available only on iOS, that lets you virtually place multiple furniture items in a room in your home so you can see how they look.

Read more