Requiem For A Daydream: RIP Phone VR

From ScenarioThinking
Jump to navigation Jump to search

id="article-body" class="row" section="article-body">





















Google's Daydream View. We had fun times.

Sarah Tew/CNET


In late 2014, I pulled CNET TV editor David Katzmaier into a conference room to show him a black plastic pair of goggles fitted over a Samsung phone. I seated him in a comfy swivel chair. I wanted to see what he thought of what I was about to show him, from a display perspective.
A few 3D 360-degree videos and virtual aquariums later, he was impressed as I was. I don't think anything wowed me more than those early . They were powered by a phone, they could be taken anywhere, and they just worked.

Nearly six years later, no one's putting phones into VR goggles anymore. One year after , its own mobile phone-connected VR platform, Google's newest Android 11 phone OS . The  vanished from Google's web store last year, and Google's phones stopped even working with Daydream since the .

The same happened for Samsung Gear VR. John Carmack, former CTO of Facebook's Oculus, which partnered with Samsung on Gear VR, delivered a  last year. Gear VR has long vanished from Samsung's product events.

Sometimes this feels utterly weird to me, because in 2020.

And yet, VR at large is still here. In fact, there have been a ton of  lately: the  and , the  and the . There are headsets that plug into PCs, and there are standalone headsets. There have been : , . is getting VR support, too.




CNET Mobile




Discover the latest on smartphones from CNET's mobile experts.





Understanding why the Daydream and Gear VR have gone away means asking why Google, Facebook and Samsung have moved on from phone VR as a strategy. And, visiting the ghosts of mobile VR from the middle of the last decade.

This story was originally written last Halloween, but it's been updated now that Google has ended Daydream support completely in Android 11, and Halloween is around the corner again.

The Pixel 4 doesn't work with Daydream anymore.

James Martin/CNET
Google: Daydream shift
Google's head of Daydream VR and AR, Clay Bavor, told me in May 2019 that the company has been , with maybe something else new on the horizon. Google had a last year (which is ), but nothing new to emerge alongside Facebook's .

Google's response regarding the disappearance of the Daydream a year ago was, "We saw a lot of potential in smartphone VR -- being able to use the smartphone you carry with you everywhere to power an immersive on-the-go experience. But over time we noticed some clear limitations constraining smartphone VR from being a viable long-term solution. Most notably, asking people to put their phone in a headset and lose access to the apps they use throughout the day causes immense friction. There also hasn't been the broad consumer or developer adoption we had hoped, and we've seen decreasing usage over time of the Daydream View headset. While we are no longer selling Daydream View or supporting Daydream on Pixel 4, the Daydream app and store will remain available for existing users."

Now, Daydream is officially gone in Android 11 and will no longer work at all. 

Google's focus has largely shifted to , like and updates to Google Lens.

Daydream (left) and Gear VR (right). It seems like yesterday.

Sarah Tew/CNET
Facebook: Making its own VR headsets now
Facebook's at the company's Oculus VR developer conference a year ago that the standalone Oculus Quest would be the do-it-all headset for the future. In 2020, Facebook has re-emphasized that the is Facebook's only VR headset going forward. It  and is compatible with some older apps for Oculus Go, another VR headset .

In 2019, I listened to John Carmack , saying that Samsung's headsets weren't ideal because of compromises required to fit a wider variety of Samsung phone screens. There were a lot of Gear VR variations, with an increasing number of little packed-in adapters to fit the Galaxy phones. 

For Oculus, the Gear VR was clearly a convenient marriage before the company was acquired by Facebook. It was a stepping stone. It was a way for Oculus to get a great display and a mobile platform. Samsung got Oculus' insight and VR ecosystem. But now that Facebook is encouraging potential customers to , standalone headsets made by Facebook are the future... and they'll eventually .

How do you fit this in VR goggles?

Angela Lang/CNET
Samsung: Its phones keep evolving
VR was a wild idea for Samsung to show off alongside smartwatches at Galaxy phone events, years ago. Now, the focus has shifted: . . More elaborate cameras. Neither of those pair well yet with goggle-type VR headsets.

Samsung's response, from a year ago, to my question about what happened to the Gear VR: "Samsung Gear VR is not compatible with Galaxy Note10 and Note10 Plus. We remain committed to innovating in VR and AR to deliver incredible new experiences to our consumers. We believe 5G will enable the next growth of immersive content streaming for AR/VR, and that's where Samsung has been focused. For example, we created the Samsung XR Content Capture Studio, one of two studios in the US that is able to do 3D volumetric video, with state of the art equipment for producing AR and VR content. In September, we produced content with the  for an immersive AR and 5G experience that fans can enjoy at the stadium throughout the season. At SDC 2019, we recreated one of the XR Content Capture Studios with partners in the immersive entertainment space to create new experiences, allowing developers to learn about our AR capabilities."

Qualcomm's recent explorations in mobile VR suggest coming in the next couple of years. If Samsung were to get back into VR, I'd expect that approach.

So, like Google, it's in a period of R&D. Who knows what will come next?
iPhones largely sat this one out
A number of unimpressive little iPhone-compatible VR goggles have cluttered stores, but none of them were better than the simple folding Google Cardboard devices. Apple didn't optimize iPhones for any set of VR goggles, like Samsung and Google. 

This meant that iPhone owners were pretty much out of the loop on the world of Gear VR and Daydream. 

And this, maybe, is what killed phone VR most of all: Your phone determined what you could use. A Samsung phone for the Gear VR. A particular Android phone for the Daydream. VR, a place where it's already hard to gather people, started to get fragmented.

Oh, the memories.

Sarah Tew/CNET
A great demo for grandparents and kids
Those YouTube videos of grandmas gasping with a VR headset on weren't staged: It was a thing. I remember showing my mother-in-law a Samsung Gear VR, and she was so amazed she considered getting one (briefly). 

My kids, when they were little, loved checking out demos, too. The simple look-around-and-stay-seated vibe of phone-based VR made it perfect for casual watching. So few of those early apps even had any way to interact, so I didn't have to worry about a kid having to point or click. 

Times have changed. VR headsets now come with elaborate controllers, like the Oculus Quest's button-studded things. I love them, but casual first-timers will have a hard time figuring out what to do. I've learned a different approach now: guiding them by seeing their actions streamed to my phone, where I can ride alongside and help them. 

Almost all VR now has full motion controls. (Oculus Quest)

Sarah Tew/CNET
VR is no longer about sitting still
My favorite experiences in VR involve waving my arms around and walking across a room. Hand tracking, controller tracking and full motion in space: These are possible because of self-contained systems that use cameras and computer vision. 

The Samsung Gear VR and Google Daydream View were sit-down experiences, where you'd just look around. The Gear VR and Daydream are still great for 360-degree movies. At film festivals like , the Gear VR is still used to play VR movies. 

Sarah Tew/CNET

But, the future of VR has spread out. And, at the same time, stopped being a thing used to try to sell phones. I loved using the Gear VR and Daydream View -- I still remember the weirdness of watching movies in a virtual theater, playing trippy games like Virtual Virtual Reality, going for little dives in virtual Aquarium Systems apps, playing poker with strangers and seeing how strangely intimate adult entertainment is. But I never wanted to carry either of them in my bag. And eventually I stopped wanting to drop a phone in or check on which apps needed to be updated.

I still use VR. But that dream of $99 plug-in-a-phone VR, well, it's dead now. The VR world has moved on to better things. Still, that world of , in a new, more-advanced form. Phones and VR make sense together, but we may never have a moment where I drop my phone into a pair of goggles again.