Pepsi and Google created a VR experience as an extension of its Super Bowl campaign. Pepsi
This weekend, Pepsi is hoping to bring people back to the future via virtual reality.
As an extension to its Super Bowl campaign airing this weekend, Pepsi has created a pop-up VR experience near U.S. Bank Stadium in Minneapolis where visitors can explore a few short scenes based on the brand’s iconic ads of the past. (Adweek initially reported Pepsi’s VR plans on Tuesday evening.) Fans watching at home can view the experience with their own VR headset or through a web-based VR microsite as soon as this week.
The experience, created in partnership with Google, begins by taking the viewer inside an old race car on the streets of an unknown city. The scene, a nod to the 1998 TV spot featuring former race car driver Jeff Gordon, shows a dashboard with the year “2018” to the left and a bobble head of Gordon to the right that bobbles when selected. On the console of the car is a Pepsi Zero Sugar, which, when selected, turns into a bottle of Pepsi Perfect from “Back to the Future.” After that, the viewer is prompted to press the horn, which starts the car racing down a tunnel. Suddenly, a levitating Dolorean zooms past the car, transporting both to the past.
The following scene sends both vehicles to the desert outside of the Halfway House Cafe—the setting for the 1991 ad featuring Cindy Crawford. The building looks like it used to, and there’s a large photo of Crawford (who stars in a 2018 remake of the commercial with her son) in the window. Clicking the photo prompts an “XOXO Cindy” to magically appear in red letters across the image. A few other surprises appear before the viewer is prompted to hop back in the Dolorean and head back to the present, where Pepsi teases out its plans to add more scenes throughout the year.
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Indeed, one of the concerns brands often have with deciding whether to create a VR campaign is that they’re often an expensive project that doesn’t have mass scale like other types of digital or linear campaigns. That’s largely because only a small percentage of the population has access to a VR headset. (According to International Data Corp., VR headset sales in 2017 totaled around 9.6 million. However, that total could increase to as high as 59.2 million in 2021.)
To help solve that, Pepsi and Google created the web-based VR version of the experience. However, the 2D version fails to capture the immersive nature that makes people feel like they’re present inside of VR. Because of that, the experience through Pepsi’s microsite falls fairly flat compared to viewing the content in virtual reality.
While the experience is in ways less complex or immersive than what many brands have done with VR over the past year, it does help add to this year’s Super Bowl “nostalgia” theme by immersing viewers more than they might otherwise feel from a 2D screen. And yet, there is still this sense that the viewer is inside of something rather than passively viewing while eating a bag of chips. Yapp said that creating a VR script is nonlinear and is more like a decision. Rather, he said it’s more like a decision tree.
“A lot of advertising is about storytelling,” he said. “But I think VR is about story-doing.”
Source: ADWEEK