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ElectroLisa, do games w Minecraft is losing VR support next year
@ElectroLisa@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I didn’t even know Bedrock had a VR mode. I’ve tried the Vivecraft mod for Java and it worked very well, albeit required some settings changed to make the controls more natural

Skymt,

I tried both, Vivecraft (being a project driven by passion) is vastly superior!

LANIK2000,

I knew and even tried it before, but I completely forgot it existed because it sucked so much. Nobody can see you moving your hands and tilting your head, which kills all the fun of a VR multi-player game IMO. It’s just a glorified controller binding for VR headsets. Considering all the other wacky things they added, I don’t see why they didn’t add actual VR support.

thericofactor, do games w Minecraft is losing VR support next year

Why are they removing support though?

FeelzGoodMan420,

Probably because VR gaming is basically dead. It never really took off and it’s a waste of time and money for them to devote resources to it. Probably like 0.1% of users are in VR.

That being said, part of why it’s dead is because no developers want to take chances on it, so it’s a self fulfilling prophecy. Valve was the last one to gamble on it.

Mistic,

That’s not even accurate.

If VR gaming is dead, then what does it say about Linux with about 5 times less users? Like, a low poly game about monkeys has a daily playerbase of a million people there. Mind you, Mincraft has 1 to 1.5 million. Not bad for a “dead” platform. Also, Valve isn’t even the last one to enter the market.

I think what you’re actually trying to say is that it’s too niche, which it absolutely is.

shapis,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

I don’t see how what they said was contradictory. VR gaming is indeed dead. And Linux gaming with 5 times less users is also even more dead.

There’s a reason why game devs completely ignore Linux as a platform.

Mistic,
  • More than 57mil (est.) monthly VR users
  • PS5 has 116mil monthly users

For how big PS5 is and how small VR is, VR sure has a lot of people playing.

Lemmy has userbase (not even monthly activity) of 0.46mil (acc. to fedidb). Is lemmy dead?

What constitutes for a dead platform to you?

shapis,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

Is Lemmy dead?

I mean. Yeah ? Can you imagine any large companies investing in this in any way? I sure can’t.

Mistic,

I think what you’re forgetting is scale.

Lemmy is niche. VR is niche. Gaming is mainstream.

You can’t call a niche dead just because there aren’t that many people into it. It’s a niche for a reason.

Linux is booming, even though it’s “dead.” Lemmy has never been this active in its entire existence. Why do investments from large companies matter?

What truly matters is growth. Negative growth is what kills a platform/industry/company/whatever else. VR is growing, Linux is growing, Lemmy is growing. It may not be fast, but they all have active userbases that support their development.

You cannot call a child “failure” just because it never achieved anything in life, can you? They are growing. They can get sick, they can recover. They can also regress due to that illness and die. Only then they’re truly dead.

shapis,
@shapis@lemmy.ml avatar

why do investments from large companies matter?

Because we are talking about a large company de investing from something.

It’s kinda the topic we are talking about.

Mistic,

Well, Mojang’s Minecraft in VR is dead. But that’s kinda far from VR gaming as a whole, don’t you think?

One symptom does not share the entire story.

Not to mention that there is a better alternative for it anyway.

linearchaos,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

It’s math. The amount of money they’re spending on supporting the VR platforms is less than the amount of money they make for the people on those platforms. They probably have to dedicate several multi-person teams to manage the clients.

Linux has some pretty good hedging going on with steam deck.

Mistic,

Well, I’ve decided to check the financials of a couple of VR companies since your counterpoint sounded reasonable. The only one working at a loss is Meta. I could argue their business model is in Death Valley right now. After all, they have major capital expenses, which aren’t easily covered unless you have a big userbase.

But that’s their VR sector. Overall, Meta’s profitable and can easily cover all the expenses several times over.

Also, what do you mean by “they have to dedicate several multi-person teams to manage the clients?” Firstly, who’s “they,” secondly, if I understood you right, that sounds prepostrous, unless you’re talking B2B.

linearchaos,
@linearchaos@lemmy.world avatar

I’m not talking about VR companies I’m talking about Mojang.

The teams that Mojang keeps to work on the platforms cost more than the income from the people using those clients.

If you make a game, and you decide to support Mac, and Mac only brings in $500 a month but you have to pay somebody $3,000 a month to maintain the client, You’re losing $2,500 a month for that particular market segment.

Nothing says you have to get rid of those people or that client, But it’s a fiscally sound decision.

Mistic,

Oh, yeah, that I agree with.

My head was at the “VR gaming” as a whole back when I was writing the comment.

JusticeForPorygon, do games w Minecraft is losing VR support next year
@JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world avatar

Still mods for java out there luckily. Sucks for PlayStation players though, that’s how I first experienced VR.

And I think they had previously announced support for PSVR 2, but u guess that’s not happening now.

Rentlar, do games w Minecraft is losing VR support next year

This is why Java edition and mods reign supreme.

umbrella, (edited )
@umbrella@lemmy.ml avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • Voltage,

    I been playing bedrock with my brother for a week now and it is good, mobs actually feel like a threat now and there are very small details to game. Like swords doing more damage to mobs than axes but when the mob is wet or is raining the axe does more damage.

    HBK, do games w Minecraft is losing VR support next year
    @HBK@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    TBH it was pretty barebones, but I did enjoy seeing some of my worlds in stereoscopic 3D. It also scares me for the future of VR (minecraft is a REALLY popular game. If it is dropping VR does that mean adoption isn’t going that well?).

    Also, this is specifically regarding Bedrock minecraft. Java has never officially supported it, but there are mods that add the functionality.

    Shard,

    VR doesn’t belong everywhere. There are good games for it but it needs to be purpose built and planned for. Not just a port of an existing game.

    JusticeForPorygon,
    @JusticeForPorygon@lemmy.world avatar

    Yeah but playing Minecraft in VR was pretty neat, even if it wasn’t the greatest experience.

    lost_faith,

    There is a game called cyubeVR on steam and PS2VR, built from the ground up for vr. It is a great fun game with a solo dev. Highly suggest checking it out, there are quite a few videos on it and it is highly modable. It is sad that the big cos are dropping support

    warmaster, (edited )
    ClassifiedPancake, do gaming w Analogue’s 4K Nintendo 64 launches next year for $249

    Damn I wish they would sell in Europe directly. Ordering anything from Analogue would have ridiculous shipping costs and customs duty so I never got around to ordering the Pocket either. I know there are cheaper options especially for game boy hardware but Analogues is just so sexy.

    chloyster, do gaming w Analogue’s 4K Nintendo 64 launches next year for $249

    I have a love hate with analogue. They undoubtedly make really excellent products, and I absolutely adore my pocket. However they really lean into the fomo of their stuff. They make very few units, and you have to be ready to go when they drop more product most of the time. I will say though the price of this is a lot lower than I expected. And while you shouldn’t count on it, every analogue system has gotten some form of ability to play roms from other systems (whether it’s built into the OS (not happening for the 3D) or a “jailbreak” is released by basically an employee of analogue).

    Analogue stuff is good if you have cartridges you want to play, but at this point, with the recent release of Taki Udon’s cheap Mister Pi (retroremake.co/pages/store), I think Mister is the way to go. It’s an open source project as opposed to analogue’s implementation. The issue with Mister was you needed a pretty expensive DE10 Nano board to utilize it. Now you can get one of these new boards for only $100 (if you can get your hands on them. Only 2 batches have been sold so far and they sell out quick). Plus Taki is planning on using this new board to make a handheld Mister which I’m super stoked for.

    teawrecks,

    I can’t fault them for not making such a niche product at a large enough scale to make them readily available and cheap. I know we’ve become accustomed to that from other larger companies, but for a small company, that’s either very risky or just not an option. So they just design cool stuff, make just enough so that they know they can safely sell them all and thus make a predictable ROI, and move onto the next cool thing. No pressure for growth or satisfying every potential customer. Sounds like the dream.

    chloyster,

    That’s super fair and I agree for the most part. Though it’s hard to be super enthusiastic about it when they focus on a plethora of super limited edition color ways for the pocket instead of keeping the base one in stock and completely abandoning DAC support which they promised a while ago (and recently scrubbed all mention of on their site)

    turtletracks, do gaming w Analogue’s 4K Nintendo 64 launches next year for $249

    How’s this allowed?

    Dudewitbow,

    as long as analogue didnt use the devices actual hardware design and code, its completely legal. theyre not selling you games, theyre selling you a piece of hardware capable of playing said games with their own hardware design.

    i dont want to say emulation in a soft sense because its not software emulation, its hardware to hardware emulatoion.

    GammaGames, (edited )

    This is actually advertised as having no emulation, all FPGA. Idk if those are compatible but they also say the n64 was the first multiplayer console in the header so they’re clearly a little sketchy on the details lol

    4am,

    FPGAs would be considered “hardware emulation” but a lot of people don’t like that term, and think emulation should be a term limited to software.

    Like, there aren’t real N64 chips in there. The hardware IS emulating an N64 - it’s just not doing so in a way that’s comparable with software emulation at all.

    GammaGames,

    That’s silly, thank you for the explanation!

    Chewy7324,

    Analogue likely doesn’t emulate the hardware at the transistor level, as it’s far more difficult than doing what most software emulators do.

    From an interesting (altough non-conclusive) HN-thread:

    Without seeing the code, it’s impossible to know where Analog’s implementation falls on the spectrum of software emulation vs hardware simulation. There is nothing magical about FPGAs that automatically makes anything developed with them a 1:1 representation of real hardware. In fact, there are plenty of instances where the FPGA version of a particular console is literally just a representation of a popular emulator only in verilog/vhdl. In many instances, even the best FPGA implementations of some systems are still only simulating system level behavior. Off the top of my head, one famously difficult case is audio, where many chips have analog circuitry that cannot be fully simulated. [1]

    [1] news.ycombinator.com/item?id=37901381

    theangriestbird,

    Same reason emulators are allowed. As long as the emulator doesn’t use Nintendo’s literal software/hardware or schematics, and as long as the emulator doesn’t traffic in illegal file-sharing, it is allowed. Or at least, it exists in a legal grey area. And Analogue’s pitch is original hardware, essentially rebuilt from scratch using FPGA technology. You still need actual Nintendo 64 carts to use this device. Or at least, that is how it is marketed.

    I think the recent emulator shutdowns by Nintendo were more about software piracy. The devs knew that their emulators were being used to play unreleased Nintendo games. The emulators themselves may have been safe and legal, but the devs are mostly just volunteers, or small time operations running on a patreon. As soon as Nintendo applied even the smallest amount of pressure, the devs caved, because they don’t want to spend their entire life savings and then some trying to defend software piracy on principle. Me thinks that Analogue would actually put up a fight if Nintendo tried anything, and that’s why Nintendo doesn’t try anything.

    thingsiplay,

    Agreed. I also want to add that this is not a mass market product, plus its not current gen either. So Nintendo does probably not care at all, in addition to what you already said.

    vividspecter,

    I think they probably do care, but they just haven’t got around to strong-arming them yet. There’s still more emulator devs to harass after all.

    thingsiplay,

    Why shouldn’t it be allowed? The company does not violate any copyright, trademark or patent. Otherwise Nintendo would have sued them for their similar project, but for Game Boy, the Analogue Pocket.

    Gamers_mate, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune

    The lesson here is to download every single working nintendo emulator as a backup and share it with your friends. Emulation is legal after all even if the Nintendo mafia try to shut it down.

    missingno, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune
    @missingno@fedia.io avatar

    Sounds like this was more of a bribe than any legal case against the emulator. In which case nothing is stopping anyone from putting a fork back up, and gdkchan gets to laugh all the way to the bank.

    Varyag,

    I’m thinking less bribe and “laughing away to the bank” and more of a “Nintendo threatened to ruin their life with legal fees if it wasn’t taken down”. The frivolity of said case is irrelevant when they just bully normal people legally like that.

    ReversalHatchery,

    a “reverse bribe”, as is typical of nintendo

    DoucheBagMcSwag,

    Dev is in Brazil. They knew they had no chance of a takedown

    DoucheBagMcSwag,

    Problem is …is that Nintendo may have “purchased” the code so anyone making or publishing forks would be in breach of “copyright”

    missingno,
    @missingno@fedia.io avatar

    Ryujinx was released as open source under the MIT license. They can't retroactively rescind that license.

    webghost0101, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune

    I dont have any nitendo emulations but i guess this tells me i should collect some and save em on a harddrive just in case i ever need it.

    Software preservation is a nobel act after all.

    VulKendov,
    @VulKendov@reddthat.com avatar

    Inventing dynamite is also a Nobel act.

    vonbaronhans,

    Or giving yourself ulcers

    NateSwift,

    Looks like the github is still up if you’re willing to build yourself

    Varyag,

    I immediately sought out working backups of both Yuzu and Ryujinx. The “bright side” of this situation is that it pissed me off enough to go acquire both the new Zelda game that potentially caused this whole situation by being leaked early, and the game that was at the absolute top of my to-play list: Unicorn Overlord. So far it is looking like a fantastic game.

    millie,

    Is the new one better than Tears of the Kingdom?

    LoamImprovement,

    I like it more, but I’m a fan of the more classic Zeldas. It’s good, but it’s marred by the same technical issues that plagued the LA remake, and the lack of some basic QoL features like a Quick Select or Favorites wheel is bringing it from ‘great’ to ‘good.’

    turtletracks,

    For anyone curious, Echoes is definitely playable on steam deck

    theangriestbird, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune

    Shiiiiiit. Now I’m really regretting not finishing TOTK on my PC back when I had that set up.

    Dumbkid,
    @Dumbkid@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

    Last version is 1.1.1403, I’m sure you can find it some where still

    romano,

    Here’s an archive link for a windows binary: https://archive.org/download/ryujinx-1.1.1403-win_x64

    iltoroargento, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune
    @iltoroargento@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    Lol it’s like Nintendo just wants to back itself into a corner and waste away with its IP. Jeez. I honestly have no desire to purchase anything from them anymore.

    I still emulate a solid amount of their games I’ve had for most of my life because I don’t want to wear down my old hardware.

    They haven’t gotten a cent out of me since the GameCube, though, so I understand I’m probably not going to be their target audience anymore.

    Edit: Mobile, *its not “it’s”

    Chozo,
    @Chozo@fedia.io avatar

    Lol it's like Nintendo just wants to back itself into a corner and waste away with its IP.

    This is a Switch emulator, meaning these are games that are still available for sale. It's not like taking down a SNES emulator or something Nintendo hasn't made available for 30+ years, it's involving games they're selling today. Taking down an emulator is literally Nintendo protecting its IP.

    I honestly have no desire to purchase anything from them anymore.

    If you were using this emulator, you weren't likely purchasing anything from them in the first place. And I'm no doctor, but... I'd have to imagine that's likely the reason Nintendo took this down to begin with.

    iltoroargento,
    @iltoroargento@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    I getcha, just have not been stoked about Nintendo’s continual deathmarch against the hydra of emulation.

    I honestly think it’s more of a waste of money than it’s actually worth and the publicity of taking down emulation sites is pretty bad for them (especially when they take down ones which deal with largely abandonware or really old games, like Vimm’s lair did).

    Without getting into the debate over the ethics of piracy or anti consumer practices, jumping into the fray by aggressively litigating and making a splash like Nintendo and Sony seem to focus on likely hurts their bottom line and certainly hurts their reputation with consumers.

    missingno,
    @missingno@fedia.io avatar

    While I don't support pirating products that are currently for sale, I do think it's essential that emulators like Ryujinx are developed now in order to preserve titles for later. Some Switch software already has been delisted, and someday eventually all of it will be.

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    While I don’t support pirating products that are currently for sale

    I do when Nintendo refuses to make them available on other (higher quality) hardware and also treats their paying consumers and fans like scum. I can boot up Doom on any of a dozen different computers 30 years later and play to my heart’s content but that’s not an option for Nintendo. Piracy generally is completely justified by a vast array of anti-consumer bullshit. If they can’t make games without resorting to that bullshit, fuck 'em. I hope they go under.

    iltoroargento,
    @iltoroargento@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    The delisting is what gets me most (and we’re dealing with that in basically every media catalogue from film/tv to games).

    Well, that and the blatant cash grabs I see with rereleases that end up being console specific and basically unsupported like with the cases of the Wii store and basically every iteration of their online stores since.

    I played Wii and eventually Wii U with buddies for smash but am glad I didn’t own the systems. I know one of my friends gave a lot of money to Nintendo multiple times getting classics like Pokemon Snap and other nostalgia buys on multiple systems.

    My most recent experience with Nintendo was borrowing a buddy’s switch to play Breath of the Wild back around when it came out. I’m pretty meh on their new content and by the way a lot of their recent releases were received, I’m not super interested. Might bug someone to play the Pokemon Arceus one which seems kinda cool, but that would be the extent of my interest and it’s not really nagging at me, anyway.

    My main gripe is that they seem to be doing the bare minimum with their IP (with little innovation in the field/botched releases) and wasting money/resources on what I see as frivolous, shortsighted, lawsuits in the name of protecting their property as well as corporate heavy production that ends up with forgettable and formulaic games.

    Maybe I am now become old, but I don’t care to see the most recent iteration of the Pokemon, Zelda, Mario, or Smash Bros sagas and am perfectly content with replaying N64 to GameCube classics in those series. Probably doesn’t help that I went to college with a bunch of friends who hung out and played Project M with some Halo 3 or Reach sprinkled in for variety lol.

    theangriestbird, (edited )

    If you were using this emulator, you weren’t likely purchasing anything from them in the first place. And I’m no doctor, but… I’d have to imagine that’s likely the reason Nintendo took this down to begin with.

    Actually…I own a Switch and paid full price for TOTK on launch week. But playing the game in 30fps chunky resolution was very painful for me, as i’ve gotten quite used to 60fps+ over the last few years with 3D games. I almost put the game down in the first hour or so, playing the game was literally making my eyes hurt. That’s when i went poking into the Switch emulation scene and set up yuzu (RIP). Within a few hours i was playing TOTK at 60fps 1440p and it was mostly glitch free. I put another 20 hours into the game before putting that down. But it was a glorious 20 hours, as that game is absolutely beautiful when you can wipe away the greasy look of 30fps low-res Switch graphics.

    So…I am a Nintendo customer that was getting a better experience out of my purchased Nintendo game by emulating it. I know that isn’t everyone in this scene - I see the reddit posts everyday for the past week about people playing leaked Echoes* of Wisdom. I get why that shit would piss Nintendo off. It just sucks that now, others can’t share the amazing experience I had with TOTK.

    LoamImprovement,

    It’s funny, I own a switch and I would have bought the game (and I probably will still if the technical and QoL issues get resolved) but I’m emulating it better than the hardware can run it right now.

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    No one hates Nintendo players more than Nintendo

    cupcakezealot,
    @cupcakezealot@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

    Lol it’s like Nintendo just wants to back itself into a corner and waste away with its IP. Jeez. I honestly have no desire to purchase anything from them anymore.

    pretty sure the only reason nintendo cared is because ryujinx was prominently displayed in the leaked footage of echos of wisdom, pre launch

    iltoroargento,
    @iltoroargento@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

    Nintendo’s been way too busy in this scene for too long a time for that to be the only reason. I can see that such a leak wouldn’t help, but they’ve been pouring money into these cases for years and have really ramped it up in the last five or so

    helenslunch, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    This reads a lot like Nintendo just paid the dev to take it all down.

    NateSwift,

    literally what happened

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    Sauce?

    Kolanaki,
    !deleted6508 avatar

    The article being posted…

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    It says nothing of the sort.

    NateSwift,

    Discord mod/developer message. Posted to Ryujinx’s twitter (xcancel)

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    That’s not the developer, that’s a Discord mod, and they said in that message specifically that they haven’t heard anything from the dev. It also says nothing about what “the agreement” is. It could very well be a legal settlement.

    NateSwift,

    He is a developer (github) and in fact had a pull request merged in August. I suppose it’s possible it was a “legal agreement”. It seems implied that it wasn’t, and that was what I remembered when replying

    helenslunch,
    @helenslunch@feddit.nl avatar

    It seems implied that it wasn’t

    Yes that’s what I said. What you said is that it was “literally what happened” which led me to believe you had some sort of proof.

    thingsiplay, do gaming w Nintendo has reportedly shut down Ryujinx, the Switch emulator that was supposedly immune

    I wonder if Cemu is next…

    theangriestbird,

    It’s a fair question, but honestly I think Nintendo generally focuses on emulators that they perceive as affecting their current or near-future income. The Wii U is fully dead to Nintendo, at least for the moment.

    joyjoy,

    They’ll probably use one of these emulators in the future to emulate switch games on the switch 2.

    theangriestbird,

    but without any of the cool fps unlocker or upscaler mods

    TheGalacticVoid,

    I doubt that the Switch 2 needs emulation as it’s very likely to be the successor to the Tegra X1

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