Skip to main content

BigScreen brings Martian LAN parties to the Oculus Store

BigScreen VR LAN Party
Image used with permission by copyright holder
BigScreen is hitting the Oculus Home store with a big update today, delivering on the promise to bring a “completely cross-platform” LAN party experience to virtual reality.

Using BigScreen, up to four users can share a virtual space, broadcasting desktop video and audio to create the illusion of an old-fashioned LAN party, with each “player” being represented by a disembodied head.

When BigScreen launched earlier this year, users were all represented in the virtual space as floating, featureless white heads, but today’s update changes all of that. With the latest update, users can customize their avatars with new hairstyles, skin colors, eye colors, and accessories like glasses or VR goggles, alongside eye and mouth tracking to allow users to tell each other apart more easily, according to Engadget.

Everyone’s still a disembodied head, and even when using the HTC Vive’s motion controllers, users’ hands are invisible. Still, today’s update is a big improvement, providing a much more interactive experience for users of the VR LAN party software.

Today’s update also includes support for shared desktop audio from any participant in a virtual space, previously only the host could broadcast audio to all four participants. With the avatar updates and the support for shared audio, BigScreen is really delivering on its promise to bring the LAN party experience of yesteryear into the 21st century.

BigScreen was one of the first platforms which allowed the use of software not designed for VR in a VR space, initially just via the Steam VR store, but today’s expansion into the Oculus Home store makes the popular VR LAN software more accessible for owners of the Oculus Rift. Users can choose from a dozen virtual environments, including the Moon and Mars, to share while they play games, watch movies, or just chat.

The latest update for BigScreen is available today, for free, on the Steam VR and Oculus Home stores.

Jayce Wagner
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A staff writer for the Computing section, Jayce covers a little bit of everything -- hardware, gaming, and occasionally VR.
You can now high-five in VR
oculus quest finger tracking coming in 2020

An update to the Meta Quest VR headset is allowing improved hand gestures, which includes both clapping and high-fiving in VR.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerburg has often painted a vision of an immersive metaverse, where people could interact almost as if they would in real life. Meta's ambitions are one step closer, as the company showed off enhanced hand tracking support for its Quest VR headset. They attempt to provide much more natural motions to make virtual interactions less awkward.

Read more
New report indicates that Apple’s two secret projects are its ‘next big thing’
Apple VR Headset Concept by Antonio De Rosa

We’ve known for a while now that Apple is working on a high-end mixed reality headset with 8K screens, a powerful chip, and a lightweight design. What we haven’t known before today is that the company is already working on a second-generation version of the device.

The news comes from reputable Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo. In a new report, Kuo outlines what he expects from the headset in both its first- and second-generation iterations, according to MacRumors,. He states the device will mix augmented reality (AR) and VR into one device. That means there would be no need to pick up a second device if you were interested in both technologies, which would set it apart from most headsets currently on the market that tend to focus on one tech or the other.

Read more
Pimax’s 12K QLED VR headset wants to take virtual reality to the next level
Pimax's new 12k QLED VR headset.

It seems that virtual reality may be about to become even more real than ever before -- all thanks to a new VR headset. Pimax, a company that manufactures VR equipment, announced the upcoming release of a new 12K QLED VR headset that will feature technologies such as eye tracking, full-body tracking, and refresh rates of up to 200Hz. The headset, dubbed Pimax Reality 12K QLED, is part of the company's venture into the metaverse and a step toward bringing true realism to using VR.

During today's Pimax Frontier event, the company's representatives talked at length about the goals behind the product -- naturalness, self-awareness, and freedom. Pimax wants to bring these qualities into virtual reality and the metaverse, allowing people from all over the world to interact and explore virtual worlds together. While VR technology already allows for some of that to happen, Pimax wants to take it to the next level with its new invention -- the Reality 12K QLED VR headset.

Read more