Skip to main content

Facebook’s Horizon VR world looks like Second Life all over again

At Oculus Connect 6, Facebook’s annual virtual reality (VR) developers conference, the company announced its next big push into social VR. It’s called Facebook Horizon and is a platform for social interaction and games that is based heavily on user-created content. It takes the place of Facebook Spaces and Oculus Rooms, both of which will be shut down by the end of the year.

On the surface, it makes a lot of sense. CEO Mark Zuckerberg started out the keynote by saying that Facebook has been about bolstering digital social interaction. Moving that to VR means translating things like groups, events, and messaging — all of which will reportedly be a big part of Facebook Horizon.

Welcome to Facebook Horizon

As you’d expect, the process all starts with designing your own legless avatar “from an array of style and body options to ensure everyone can fully express their individuality,” according to an Oculus blog post.

From there, Horizon will present you with a main hub world with portals to wherever you want to go from there. Horizon will start you off with experiences made by Facebook itself, such as a multiplayer aerial game called Wing Strikers.

But again, the focus here is on user-generated content. Horizon calls its tool “World Builder” and it can be used to construct new environments and experiences. According to Facebook, it’s not something that will require any kind of coding experience, so that everyone can try it out.

The platform will launch in beta sometime in 2020, though it’s already getting comparisons to age-old online platforms like Second Life, which has been around for upward of 16 years now, and at one point had as many as 900,000 users. The platform grew to have its own in-world economy, which plagued it with a litany of legal and regulatory concerns.

Unlike Second Life, we’d expect Horizon to be highly regulated in terms of the content that gets created for it. That might make it a bit less fascinating than what Second Life has become, but should ensure its family-friendly nature.

Along with the new VR platform, Facebook also announced that finger-tracking would come to the Oculus Quest sometime in 2020.

Updated on September 26 to fix Second Life release date and remove note about current user base.

Editors' Recommendations

Luke Larsen
Luke Larsen is the Senior editor of computing, managing all content covering laptops, monitors, PC hardware, Macs, and more.
This simple app was a surprising upgrade to my gaming PC
The Digital Trends website on the KTC G42P5.

You've been there before. You boot up a game for the first time, click through the various engine and publisher screens, and arrive on the main menu. And just like that, your ears get blasted with music and you have to quickly minimize the game in a flash-bang fog to adjust your system volume down. Well, I have good news as I've discovered an app that makes adjusting your volume much easier.

It's called JustScroll, and it does exactly what the name suggests. You just use your mouse wheel to adjust the volume on your PC. It's a simple, ingenious piece of kit, and although it's not strictly necessary, it's been a huge convenience in terms my gaming PC.
Surprisingly useful

Read more
Apple did the unthinkable with the new M4 chip
Apple introducing the new M4 chip.

Apple is doing something crazy with its new M4 chip. Although we're used to seeing new Apple silicon debut in Macs, Apple is bringing the M4 chip to the new iPad Pro first. The updated chip, which comes with an entirely new CPU architecture, builds on the GPU found in the M3 chip with ray tracing, mesh shading, and Apple's special Dynamic Cache.

With the M4, Apple says the new iPad Pro can deliver the same performance as a thin-and-light PC while using only a quarter of the power. That's due in no small part to the 3nm architecture the chip uses. The power envelope, according to Apple's claims, is all the more impressive considering the iPad Pro doesn't have any active cooling.

Read more
M4 chip: here’s everything we know about Apple’s latest silicon
Official render of Apple's M4 chip.

Apple has just announced a new slate of iPads, including an updated iPad Pro. What has that got to do with the M4 chip? Quite a lot, as those iPad Pro tablets come equipped with the M4, shockingly enough. That gives us plenty of information on what the chip might be capable of -- and what it could be like when it finally arrives in the Mac.

But while Apple spilled the beans on the M4 in its iPad range, concrete details on how that chip will affect the Mac are few and far between. If you feel adrift without a compass and want to know what to expect, you’re in the right place. We’ve gathered up all the latest M4 chip rumors and known information in one place.
Price and release date

Read more