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This VR headset can kill the player IRL if your game character dies

You won’t be waiting around to respawn for this one. Not content with building VR headsets that transport you another dimension, Oculus founder Palmer Luckey has taking gaming to the limits by physically tying the fates of you and your game’s character together. In an effort to completely obliterate the lines between the physical and virtual worlds, the eccentric inventor claims that his latest VR headset will kill the player when their gaming avatar dies in the game.

In an ode to the famous light novel Sword Art Online which was also adapted into anime series, Luckey has developed this innovative VR (virtual reality) headset which can literally kill you, just like in the novel.

More about this killer Oculus VR headset

The creator’s take on this gaming VR headset

Putting all speculations to rest, Luckey blatantly put the description on his blog that says, “If you die in the game, you die in real life.” In the thrilling dark light novel series, players reside in a giant immersive VR gaming universe. If they die in the video game, it kills them in real life as their brain gets “bombarded by extraordinarily powerful microwaves.” This gets activated when the players are attached to the ‘NerveGear’ VR head-mounted display set. Hence, the only way out is to win or find an escape route.

This new VR headset, the brainchild of Luckey, takes this concept straight out of the pages and screens into the real world. However, initial hiccups rose when he realised the gear had to be fitted to heavy equipment to carry out the lethal act.

In this regard, he mentions in the blog, “In lieu of this, I used three of the explosive charge modules I usually use for a different project, tying them to a narrow-band photosensor that can detect when the screen flashes red at a specific frequency, making game-over integration on the part of the developer very easy.” When an “appropriate game-over screen” is flashed, the user’s brain will also be destroyed.

Development and building stage

palmer luckey killer vr oculus headset
Oculus founder Palmer Luckey (Image credit: David Fitzgerald / Contributor/Getty Images)

If this has got you all frazzled and scared to even come close to your existing VR headpieces, don’t worry — this deadly killer machine is only in the research and development stage and is halfway done.

Luckey says, “The good news is that we are halfway to making a true NerveGear. The bad news is that so far, I have only figured out the half that kills you. The perfect-VR half of the equation is still many years out.”

He also has big plans for this and is hoping to add features such as an “anti-tamper mechanism” like in the Sword Art Online NerveGear. However, testing these features can lead to death, which is why he himself hasn’t tried them out yet.

Who is Palmer Luckey and what is Oculus?

Luckey is the original founder of Oculus, a VR firm, which he later sold to Meta, Facebook at that time, in 2014. The company was launched just two years before it was sold for a whopping USD 2 million. While at the helm of affairs at Oculus, Luckey also created Oculus Rift headset and other VR tech which became a major impetus for Meta’s breakthrough in the metaverse. After selling the company, he has worked extensively in developing national defence technology.

(Main and featured image credit: Palmer Luckey)

This VR headset can kill the player IRL if your game character dies

Shatricia Nair

Managing Editor

Shatricia Nair has a passion for motoring, beauty, and wellness, and is perpetually knee-deep in the world of V8s, retinols, and latest fitness trends. She has nine years of experience writing for digital media, and her bylines have appeared in Prestige, and Augustman. She'll do (almost) anything for good chocolate chip cookies.

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