Skip to main content

Here’s how to get a free Vive virtual reality headset

HTC Vive
Jeffery Van Camp/Digital Trends
You like free gear? Interested in cutting edge stuff? Know how to program? If you’re shaking your head yes, have we got a deal for you.

Valve and HTC have begun to offer free development kits for their new Vive VR headset to qualified developers, Ars Technica reports. Kits have already gone out to a handful of specially selected developers, like Bossa Studios (Surgeon Simulator, I am Bread) and Fireproof Games (The Room). And Valve plans on launching a new site in the next week or so where “all interested developers, big or small,” can apply for a free kit.

Approved developers will be sent a Developer Edition of the Vive. According to Valve’s SteamVR page, the Developer Edition includes “a headset, two controllers and two base stations — everything you need to dive in and start creating new interactive VR experiences.” The kits “will be free, at least initially,” Valve spokesman Doug Lombardi told Ars Technica. They will start shipping out later in the spring in order to build up a solid body of games before the planned 2015 consumer launch.

This distribution method is decidedly different than Oculus Rift’s approach, which is to sell the dev kits to anyone interested for $350. Giving the kits to developers by application will make it much harder for the press and general public to get their hands on them before the commercial release, while simultaneously making it easier for independent developers with limited budgets to get them. At least in theory — Lombardi didn’t provide any specifics on how many kits are going out and what the selection process will be.

Although “developers, big or small” are encouraged to apply, we don’t know what the range of chosen developers will look like. Those developers already selected, though, do show a proclivity for unconventional work, so there will likely be strong representation of indies.

Valve and HTC’s Vive headset stands apart from the other VR systems currently in development for being rooted in an actual, physical space. Instead of sitting still and moving around via a mouse/keyboard or gamepad, motion sensors map out the room you are in and map the virtual space onto the real room, sort of analogous to Star Trek’s holodeck. When you get too close to a wall in the real world, the system will gently fade in just enough reality to prevent you from hitting your nose. This fundamentally different approach leads to both new challenges and new opportunities for game design. Exploration is limited to much smaller spaces, but the experience of inhabiting those spaces is much more immersive.

So what are you waiting for? Sign up. Another dimension of reality awaits.

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
Want a 72% GPU boost for free? AMD just delivered one — here’s how to get it
AMD Radeon RX 6900 graphics card hovers over an AMD red and black background.

AMD has just revealed that its new AMD Software: Pro Edition 22.Q3 driver can increase GPU performance by up to 72%. With this update, AMD addresses a major pain point for its customers: subpar performance in OpenGL applications.

While the driver is aimed at AMD's GPU range for professionals, consumer graphics cards can benefit, too, and the gains even stretch to gaming. Here's what we know about the new Radeon driver and how to get it.

Read more
What the Golf? sequel, Twilight Zone VR, and more shown at UploadVR stream
What the Golf

UploadVR hosted its 2022 VR gaming showcase today, showing off more than 20 game trailers. From new reveals like Broken Edge to updates and shadow drop launches such as Green Hell, the show featured a wide range of titles for many types of VR gamers.

Broken Edge - Official Reveal Trailer | Upload VR 2022

Read more
You can now buy Steam Deck parts. Here’s how much they cost
A Steam Deck lying on a gridded table with its back panel removed.

Have you accidentally broken your Steam Deck already and want to fix it yourself? Valve has collaborated with iFixit to offer self-repair tools and replacement parts designed specifically for the handheld system.

The tools and replacement parts for the Steam Deck officially went live on Monday after iFixit accidentally revealed the full catalogue over the weekend, as reported by IGN. At the time, the company tweeted that it would honor the orders of Steam Deck owners who placed them before the page was removed.

Read more