Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Google offers a peek at its upcoming YouTube VR app

Add as a preferred source on Google

Counting on virtual reality being the next big thing, Google this week unveiled a veritable box of very real delights at its annual I/O developer bash in Silicon Valley.

Besides its new Android-based Daydream VR platform and accompanying hardware, the Mountain View company said it’s also planning to revamp some of its existing apps – Google Play Movies, Street View, and Google Photos among them – to offer better VR experiences for what it hopes will eventually become a huge army of enthusiastic users.

Recommended Videos

A VR-focused YouTube mobile app is also on the way, sporting the it-does-what-it-says-on-the-tin name of YouTube VR.

In a blog post teasing the app, the web giant said that while it’s already been adding support for new video and audio formats on YouTube such as 360-degree video, VR video, and spatial audio, the time was right to introduce “an easier, more immersive way to find and experience virtual reality content on YouTube.”

The app, expected to arrive in the fall alongside Daydream, will incorporate features such as voice search, discovery, and playlists, with users also able to watch all of the video site’s content, “from classic 16×9 videos to 360-degree footage to cutting-edge VR experiences in full 3-D,” YouTube VR’s Kurt Wilms wrote in the post, adding, “Whether you want a front row seat to your favorite concert, access to the best museums in the world, or a midday break from work watching your favorite YouTube creator, YouTube VR will have it all.”

Notably, Wilms said Google-owned YouTube is already working with the likes of the NBA, BuzzFeed, and Tastemade to learn more about how best to tell stories in virtual environments, with discoveries set to be shared with other content creators.

Exciting things are happening in VR, but many consumers are yet to be convinced. However, with millions of users around the world hardly ever off YouTube, the company’s decision to go all-in with VR could certainly help persuade more people to try out the immersive platform, which in turn should motivate more content creators to get involved, thus helping to ensure the platform’s long-term success.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Apple’s Hide My Email feature has an unfixed bug that leaves email addresses exposed
100% exploitable in limited testing, known since June 2025, and still unfixed as of today.
apple-merging-sign-in-with-apple-hide-my-email-icloud+

Apple has been selling Hide My Email to keep your real email address hidden, but it has a vulnerability that does the exact opposite. The worst part is that the company has known about it for a year. 

Hide My Email, part of Apple’s paid iCloud+ subscription, lets users generate anonymous email addresses for signing up to a website, so that their personal or work email remains free of promotional emails and spam. 

Read more
I hate sharing my Mac, but a face-unlocking app finally cured my privacy paranoia
Someone finally built the app locker every Mac user has been asking for.
FaceGate in action on Mac

If you have ever handed your Mac to a friend, family member, or coworker for "just a minute," you know the mild panic that follows. Sure, your Mac has a lock screen, but once someone is past it, they can open Messages, Photos, Notes, Mail, WhatsApp, and your browser.

iPhones had the same issue, but Apple solved it by adding an app lock feature with the iOS 18 update. Sadly, no such feature exists for macOS. That’s where the new FaceGate app for Mac can help you. It’s a free and open-source app that lets you lock apps on your Mac and even has some novel tricks up its sleeve. So, let’s talk about it, shall we?

Read more
The charm of a tiny Windows tablet is apparently dead at Microsoft. Long live the Surface Go!
Microsoft’s budget Surface era may be over
Microsoft Surface Go 3 stand.

Microsoft might be cleaning up its Surface lineup. According to Windows Central, Microsoft has stopped manufacturing the Surface Go and Surface Laptop Go lines, with no successors currently planned. Surface Go 4 and Surface Laptop Go 3 are reportedly out of stock in most places, and once remaining retail stock is gone, that may be it.

If this is true, then we are looking at the end of the brand's budget Surface PCs as Microsoft has plenty of premium Windows hardware.

Read more