Virtual reality enthusiasts are drawing ire when they forget about actual reality. On public transit, in cafes and on sidewalks people wearing VR headsets are getting judged, hard.
With Facebook's Oculus Rift and HTC Vive available for purchase and Sony PlayStation VR arriving in the fall, virtual reality is finding its way into the lives of tech enthusiasts with a little cash to spare.
Guy next to me on the tram is reading his emails with a VR headset. Who said VR is a solution looking for a problem? pic.twitter.com/gRHQfK0gIi
— Pete Cohen (@petecohen) March 29, 2016
Think about it this way: Wearing a VR headset is like wearing a paper bag over your head. A really exciting, immersive, interactive paper bag.
Rule 1: Don't wear your VR headset in public. You'll look like a doofus trying to look cool.
— Archimage (@Archimage) March 3, 2016
I can't imagine being secure enough to have a vr headset on in public.
— Toxic Lemon ☣️🍋 (@argobagdr) April 4, 2016
I'm sorry, but anyone who chooses to play their VR headset in public,you're pretty much BEGGING to be robbed... or kicked in the junk.
— DragonRift #BLM (@DragonRift) April 7, 2016
So it's uncouth, awkward and possibly dangerous. In Boston, mass transit officials said it was "not advisable" to wear VR devices while commuting.
"The MBTA and Transit Police remind customers of the importance of being aware of their surroundings at all times," Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority spokesman Joe Pesaturo told The Boston Globe. The statement came in response to a video posted online that appears to show a man riding the T while wearing a VR headset and playing a video game.
And it's not just buses and trains. Ben Kuchera, in a story in Polygon, described his experience using his Samsung Gear VR on a plane. He said it felt "very strange, and ... almost rude."
"It seemed almost weird to be sitting in tight space, whipping my head around to look at things only I could see," he wrote.
NPR's Avie Schneider contributed to this post.
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