Hey guys, I have a $250 Amazon gift card burning a hole in my pocket. I realize it’s not enough to cover the whole kit, but what sets are recommended for sim racing?
I too, would go with the Odyssey+Hey guys, I have a $250 Amazon gift card burning a hole in my pocket. I realize it’s not enough to cover the whole kit, but what sets are recommended for sim racing?
I assume you're asking what VR headset not what PC hardware is recommended so I'll answer that.
Everything I read in the months leading up to Christmas for the budget minded pointed to the Oculus Rift S.
So, when my wife asked what I wanted I told her that.
My PC specs i5 8400/2060 Super
She bought it and I began using it immediately after we were done opening gifts. I took my time setting it up, software, SS, nvidia tweaks etc.
I read Project Cars 2 looked the best so I began there. Sitting in the pits looking around the interior of your virtual race car is not an experience I will forget anytime soon, it's fantastic, sadly that is where the VR experience ends for me.
As soon as I began driving I realized VR is terrible for me in it's current state I felt ill going into turn one at Monza and barely completed a lap. I triple checked the settings and pushed my 2060 Super to it's limit realizing it's not my PC or settings, it's me.
A few hours later I was standing in line at Best Buy with a store credit. I left with a LG 34" 3440x1440 curved ultrawide.
My advice to anyone with the VR itch you must find a way to try it first or buy from an easy return outlet.
I absolutely hated it.
You need to give it more of a chance. Start with slower cars, full tin tops, and only play for very short stints. Admittedly I didn't feel as bad as you did at the start, but I did feel slightly unwell after racing. I don't feel I'll at all these days no matter what happens in the headset.
Also I think locking the horizon helps some people, you might try that too.
The thing with the Rift S is that the lenses are set at a certain distance apart and there is no user adjustment for that. If you distance between pupils falls out with the average 50% then you may also experience problems.
This is my feeling exactly. I have got the Odyssey + from B&H for 200. It is one of my best purchases towards sim racing 2nd only to my Wheel setup. I stopped playing one of my favorite sims due to lack of VR ( automobilista ) after trying VR. To the point where I uninstalled it completely. Driving on a screen just doesnt feel "right" anymore. Like others have said. You have to build up your tolerance.. I never really had much of a problem with sim racing. But when i played Payback 2 in vr.... woooo did it made me sick. I felt sick for the rest of the day. So i stick with strictly Racing titles in VR. And the occasional Beat saber.The Samsung Odyssey is pretty good for sim racing as one of the higher rez options available and also OLED though as it has inside out tracking not so good if you want to use it for non sim room scale gaming. You do need a pretty decent GPU to drive it though. I’m the other end of the spectrum from Jason and can’t sim outside of VR now and had to say goodbye to Automobilista.
Most people will get a bit of nausea early on but if you stick with it you should build up a tolerance though seated sims are generally at the easier end of VR for comfort.
I don't know where that statement comes from but I can certainly tell you it is not true for everyone.Ive heard ACC VR is garbage for some reason, people are getting low fps. Smooth fps is cruicial to avoid motion sickness. Never tried VR myself but it makes sense. Im in the market and cant decide.
It’s normal to feel ill the first times. For me it took about a month before I could do a 5 minute race. After 2 months I could do a hour long race. Now after almost two years, I can do endurance races, jump in Dr2.0, spinning around, reverse. Everything.I assume you're asking what VR headset not what PC hardware is recommended so I'll answer that.
Everything I read in the months leading up to Christmas for the budget minded pointed to the Oculus Rift S.
So, when my wife asked what I wanted I told her that.
My PC specs i5 8400/2060 Super
She bought it and I began using it immediately after we were done opening gifts. I took my time setting it up, software, SS, nvidia tweaks etc.
I read Project Cars 2 looked the best so I began there. Sitting in the pits looking around the interior of your virtual race car is not an experience I will forget anytime soon, it's fantastic, sadly that is where the VR experience ends for me.
As soon as I began driving I realized VR is terrible for me in it's current state I felt ill going into turn one at Monza and barely completed a lap. I triple checked the settings and pushed my 2060 Super to it's limit realizing it's not my PC or settings, it's me.
A few hours later I was standing in line at Best Buy with a store credit. I left with a LG 34" 3440x1440 curved ultrawide.
My advice to anyone with the VR itch you must find a way to try it first or buy from an easy return outlet.
I absolutely hated it.
Starting with DR, you are braver than me.VR can be amazing and I only use VR period. I don't game on a screen at all.
However there are some pretty stiff PC hardware requirements to make it work well.
And even if you have it working well, driving and flight sims are the titles most likely to give you nausea.
I have found that a motion rig can help with nausea because it tricks your brain into thinking you are actually moving, but that is a big chunk of change just to make VR work better. Once I added my NLRv3 to my rig, my friends who tried it out with zero VR experience tended to go much longer or have no ill effects.
When I first started with a static rig it took me 5 days of 20 minute sessions each in Dirt Rally where I would go until my stomach started to complain. Then I was pretty much fine in VR going forward. A month later it took me one day in Eve Valkyrie flying to get comfortable with that and then I spent another 140 hours dog fighting in space and felt perfectly fine.
I use a Valve Index and love it. I settled into VR very quickly and haven't had any nausea, I do feel a bit weird for a minute or so after coming out of a long VR session but I think that is understandable and it is not problematic - it soon passes. VR is a game changer and I can't race flat anymore.
The ACC issues are real - I have an i9 9900k and and 2080 Ti both OC'd and ACC is still struggle to maintain 90FPS. I can only do so with a full field by reducing the graphics to a level that shouldn't be necessary with my hardware. Hot lapping is a different story - it works well and looks great. R3E, RF2, AC, KK and Dirt 2.0 all run fine with high graphics settings - ACC is the outlier.
Well the guy above you says otherwise
This is dissapointing if ACC has problems with VR. I would guess is the game were it would make the most sense to use since its competitive and VR is supposedly great to improve times since you can turn better and have better spacial sense.
I'm also running a i9-9900K with 2080Ti. I can run iRacing and PC2 at 120 fps, but only 90fps with ACC, but I've never played it with a full field.