Skip to main content

Tongue-tracking in VR has arrived

Meta Quest Pro face-tracking demo shows a green-skinned flower person with surprised expression.
Meta

A new face-tracking extension lets Meta Quest Pro users poke their tongues out at you in a wordless statement of their feelings or even blow a raspberry.

How better to express a sweltering day or an exhausting workout? This could be the technology that revolutionizes VR in 2024. Am I being too tongue-in-cheek?

Honestly, it’s a nice option to add to the Quest Pro’s current hand-, eye-, and face-tracking. Meta’s most expensive VR headset allows quite a range of expression already. I can gesture with my hands, blink, wink, move my eyes, and open and close my mouth in various positions. You can’t do that with the new Quest 3.

Tongues were wagging when @0GUzzuqPjUVpY57 broke the news on X (formerly Twitter), along with providing a video demonstration showing two animated avatars alongside a Quest Pro user controlling the action.

Rleased new #VRCFT modules for new #QuestPro v2 facial tracking with support for tongue.

Supports (Air)Link and VD via VDX (when VD adds support) using the ALXR Local module and ALXR clients with the ALXR Remote module

You can download from here https://t.co/F37U2zA8is#VRChat pic.twitter.com/sUmfLaXVpN

— コレヂャン (@0GUzzuqPjUVpY57) December 14, 2023

Since the Quest Pro includes face-tracking, it seems like Meta should have included tongue-tracking, but perhaps felt it would be controversial. HTC makes a Face Tracker accessory to synchronize mouth and tongue movements with an avatar, and it’s compatible with many VR headsets.

Of course, you shouldn’t add more weight and extra expense if you can avoid it. With the new ALXR module from korejan on Github, you can emote with your tongue in compatible PC VR apps and games like VRChat.

The developer shows off Quest Pro tongue tracking extension.
A developer shows off the Quest Pro tongue-tracking extension. korejan

The extension reportedly works with Meta’s AirLink and Virtual Desktop via an app called VDX. You can install a tongue-tracking extension as a local module for ALXR or as a remote module if you use ALVR streaming.

If you’re unfamiliar with VRChat and ALXR, you’ll need to do a bit of reading to understand how to use the tongue-tracking extension. In the tweet thread, there’s a link to Reddit for more details about how to get started.

Note that installing this extension won’t add tongues to your Meta avatar and can’t help with the Quest version of VRChat. Also, few games and apps support face-tracking. It’s probably only worth the effort if you are already enjoying face- or body-tracking in VRChat or another social VR app on your PC.

Editors' Recommendations

Alan Truly
Alan is a Computing Writer living in Nova Scotia, Canada. A tech-enthusiast since his youth, Alan stays current on what is…
Your Quest 3 just got so much better — for free
First Encounter is the perfect introduction to mixed reality on Quest 3.

First Encounter is the perfect introduction to mixed reality on the Quest 3. Meta

The Quest 3 already boasted the best mixed reality experience of any VR headset other than the Apple Vision Pro. Now, as part of the v64 update, the Quest 3's passthrough quality is about to get even better, with less graininess in lower light, more detail, and better handling of phone screens.

Read more
We have some bad news for Quest owners
The original Oculus Quest 1 appears on a white background.

If you've been holding onto your original Oculus Quest or Quest 1 VR headset, it's time to upgrade because support is ending soon. The Quest 1 came out in 2019, so this headset is nearly five years old and quickly approaching the end of support. In August 2024, the original Quest will stop receiving security updates and bug fixes.

Meta recently emailed developers with an alert that new VR games and apps will be blocked from supporting the Quest 1 next month. Updates to existing apps will also cease. The Quest 1 will still have access to a large library of games, but to enjoy the latest releases, it's time to upgrade. This news follows a slow pullback that started last year when social features were removed.

Read more
Does the Vision Pro work with glasses and contacts?
An Apple employee shows a person how to use a Vision Pro headset at an Apple Store.

Apple gave the Vision Pro headset incredible clarity. We know this because one of our writers praised its clarity after his own hands-on experience with the headset.

But that praise-worthy clarity doesn't matter, though, if people who wear glasses can't use prescription lenses to enjoy the Vision Pro's large, sharp screens. That might be one of the most important questions to answer for more than half of the U.S. population that wear glasses or contact lenses -- and the answer isn't great.
Apple Vision Pro with glasses
The Apple Vision Pro works with Zeiss optical inserts for vision correction. Apple

Read more