Why Teleportation Makes Sense In VR

Getting around in virtual reality is a bit tricky right now. Even in room-scale VR, players are restricted by the physical size of their play space. Trying to walk to a point on a digital horizon might cause you to crash into a very real wall — which is why VR games like Robo Recall and Budget Cutsallows players to teleport through the experience, rather than walk. This works surprisingly well, but I could never put my finger on why it worked. At Oculus Connect 3 this week, VR filmmaker Eric Darnell gave me an answer: teleportation in VR works because I grew up watching television.
 
Darnell has a lot to say about the future of storytelling in virtual reality — as the co-founder of Baobab studios, he’s made VR filmmaking his business. Teleportation, he says, is really just the VR equivalent of the “cuts” we’re used to seeing in TV and film. He credits Bullet Train for pioneering the practice in virtual reality, but seems to think the mechanic was inevitable. “Teleportation in games is like giving the viewer or player the ability to ‘edit’ their experience in film.” It feels somewhat natural because it’s a storytelling tool filmmakers have been using for over a century. Giving that control to the player, however, makes his job a little harder.

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Source: Engadget

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