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A VR game has finally scared me, but I wasn’t creeping through a haunted house or shooting at hordes of zombies. I was holding a real baseball bat, facing down 70 mile per hour pitches, almost too paralyzed to swing it. That might’ve had something to do with the $2000 of PC gear running TrinityVR’s DiamondFX baseball simulation a few feet away from the hunk of wood I was holding in my hands—a hunk of wood I couldn’t actually see, with the HTC Vive strapped to my head. Also, it turns out real pitches are a hell of a lot more intimidating than the walking dead.
DiamondFX isn’t currently a game—it’s a VR simulation of real Major League Baseball pitches, using data collected from pro pitchers over the past decade or so. Unlike generously arcadey batting simulations I’ve played in the past, like the dinky Wii Sports and the dinkier VR Baseball, pitches in DiamondFX come at you with the speed of the real thing. And because they emulate real pitches, they’ll twist away at the last second to catch a corner of the strike zone, or come straight down the middle so fast you can’t react the way you can in most games. For an MLB player or a Street Fighter pro, the insanely narrow window of about 150 milliseconds is somehow enough time to act. When I played DiamondFX at GDC, no one had gotten a hit off a real pitch.
I didn’t fare any better, but I spent most of my time marveling at how surreal it felt to be swinging a heavy baseball bat that I couldn’t see (and hoping for four balls in a row so I didn’t strike out like a complete chump). It’s a completely different experience than swinging a controller, and I love that HTC’s new Vive Tracker peripheral, mounted at the base of the bat, is accurate enough to determine how and where I’m swinging. I think I’d prefer it if it was mounted to something that felt a bit less destructive in my unsure grip.
I did have the guts to swing at some more reasonable pitches, at least. Before turning on the real pitching data and upping the speed to 70+ mph, TrinityVR started me off with some slower, less tricky pitches I could actually get a piece of. I hit a few foul balls and ground outs that almost felt like victory.
My favorite thing about the demo, though, was rewatching the pitches in slow motion as they traveled through a three dimensional representation of the strike zone. I doubt I’ve watched a baseball game in my adult life without saying “Bullshit, that wasn’t a strike” at least once. Watching a replay of my swing made me eat those words.
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Source: PCGamer