Skip to main content

Valve wants Team Fortress 2 to dominate your sense through virtual reality

Image used with permission by copyright holder

Valve’s nascent hardware business slowly started to peak out into the public at the Consumer Electronics Show last week. Xi3’s tiny prototype all-in-one PC made for the living room gave the world its first tangible taste of just what kind of gaming machine Valve wants to slap its name onto. Over the past twelve months though, Valve has hinted that it’s working on far more than just a box that runs video games. It’s also working on new interfaces, possibly game controllers, and redesigned keyboard-mouse combinations. “Wearable Computing” is a big part of Valve’s research, and virtual reality-style headsets are a part of its vision. The quiet company will talk in detail about how it sees games working with VR headsets at this year’s GDC.

Valve programmer Joe Ludwig is scheduled to give a talk at the 2013 Game Developers Conference entitled “What We Learned Porting Team Fortress 2 to Virtual Reality.”

“Several people at Valve spent the past year exploring various forms of wearable computing,” reads the talk description, “The wearable effort included porting Team Fortress 2 to run in virtual reality goggles. Topics covered include an overview of what stereo support entails, rendering 2D user interface in a 90 degree field of view display, dealing with view models and other rendering shortcuts, and how mouselook can interact with head tracking in a first person shooter. In addition to the lessons that apply to Team Fortress 2, there are also several lessons that would apply to any new virtual reality game.”

A number of developers have been working hard to convert existing first-person video games for VR headsets over the past couple of year. Id’s John Carmack (DoomQuake) in particular demoed the HD remastered Doom 3: BFG Edition with a VR headset at a number of public events in 2012. “Sony and Microsoft are going to fight over gigaflops and teraflops and GPUs and all this. In the end, it won’t make that much difference,” said Carmack after E3 2012, “In the end, it won’t make that much difference. When you get to this, it really makes a big difference in the experience. Nintendo went and brought motion into the gaming sphere and while only having a tenth of the processing power was able to outsell all of them in all of these ways. I think someone has an opportunity to do this here [with VR headsets]. It takes a whole ecosystem though, but it is almost perfect.”

Valve may well be the company that seizes that opportunity.

Anthony John Agnello
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Anthony John Agnello is a writer living in New York. He works as the Community Manager of Joystiq.com and his writing has…
PlayStation trophies are finally coming to PC with new overlay
The PC version of Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut.

Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut is arriving on PC on May 16, and it's coming with a new PlayStation overlay. This will allow PC players to log in or create a PlayStation account and access many features found on the console, including earning trophies.

Announced via the PlayStation Blog, Ghost of Tsushima Director's Cut's PC release will be the first PlayStation game that implements the PlayStation overlay feature. This optional screen can be accessed through an in-game menu or keyboard shortcut to view your existing friends list, trophies, settings, and profile. This will be the first game in which PC players can earn PlayStation Trophies in addition to Steam and Epic Games Achievements.

Read more
The best cozy games
Riding in a boat with Kapp'n in Animal Crossing: New Horizons.

In a world where so many games send you on missions with tense action and high stakes, sometimes it's nice to just sit back and relax a bit. That's where the cozy genre comes in with calming exploration, crafting, and decorating that give you a sense of purpose without all of the stress that comes from more action-oriented games. If that's what you're after, look no further, as we've compiled a list of what we consider to be the best cozy games you can play right now.

Animal Crossing: New Horizons

Read more
9 best processors for PC gaming: tested and reviewed
The AMD Ryzen 9 7950X3D installed in a motherboard.

It's tough to find the right gaming CPU for your next PC. We've benchmarked dozens of processors to find the best CPU for gaming, and there's a clear winner right now: AMD's Ryzen 7 7800X3D. Although the latest chip from Team Red claims the crown, there are still several other great options on the market.

Whatever your needs and budgets, though, we have options from AMD and Intel that will be great performers. We're focused on gaming here, but if you want a processor that can game and get work done, make sure to check out our list of the best processors.

Read more