Skip to main content

You can now high-five in VR

An update to the Meta Quest VR headset is allowing improved hand gestures, which includes both clapping and high-fiving in VR.

Meta CEO Mark Zuckerburg has often painted a vision of an immersive metaverse, where people could interact almost as if they would in real life. Meta’s ambitions are one step closer, as the company showed off enhanced hand tracking support for its Quest VR headset. They attempt to provide much more natural motions to make virtual interactions less awkward.

Object and Clapping

The company detailed the update in a blog post on its Oculus developer page:

“Today, we’re unlocking major improvements to our Hand Tracking API, Presence Platform’s hand tracking capability—including step-change improvements in tracking continuity, gesture support, movement, and performance. This update also allows fast and overlapping hand movements, enables clapping and other hand-over-hand interactions, and opens up nearly endless object manipulation possibilities.”

Meta attributes these improvements to a developing a new machine learning method to better understand hand movements, particularly when the hand is occluded (blocked) or moving quickly. Meta says this opens up the use of the hands for apps that require more robust and complex tracking.

Developers who have already built-in hand tracking using Presence Platform simply need to add a single element in the Android Manifest file <meta-data android:name=”com.oculus.handtracking.version” android:value=”V2.0″/>. This allows devs to use the same API calls as before, but with the added benefit of better performance and tracking. Meanwhile, those using Unity or Unreal Engine will have to wait for further configuration details.

Fast Waving

This upgrade could change how interactions are done in a fully virtual space and open up the door to controller-less VR. You’d be able to fully use your hands and fingers as you would in real life (for the most part) and interact with virtual objects and people more naturally.

If anything, this fulfills Microsoft’s original dream for the Kinect peripheral for the Xbox 360 and Xbox One. The Kinect was marketed to be “controller-free gaming” and allowed players to move more naturally. It was supposed to be an easier alternative to the Nintendo Wii, which used the motion-controlled Wii-mote for imitating gestures.

This hand tracking update dovetails nicely with rumors that Meta will be releasing a “Quest 2 Pro” later this year. The updated headset will reportedly include upgraded 2160 x 2160 mini-LED displays and facial recognition.

Editors' Recommendations

David Matthews
David is a freelance journalist based just outside of Washington D.C. specializing in consumer technology and gaming. He has…
Apple Vision Pro vs. Meta Quest Pro: How will Apple stack up?
Apple Vision Pro has a digital crown just like the Apple Watch.

Apple's new Vision Pro is more than triple the price of Meta's premium VR headset, the Quest Pro. Is the Vision Pro really worth the extra expense, or will you be just as happy with a Quest Pro and thousands of dollars left in your pocket? You might be surprised at the answer.

Quality is a great way to justify a high price. Meta and Apple each boast advanced designs, better displays, fast performance, and greater comfort than mainstream headsets. When comparing which is the best VR headset, you should consider all of these details. Which aspects are most important depends on how you anticipate using the device.

Read more
Meta Quest 3 is official, but Apple is waiting in the wings
Meta Quest 3 shown with its controllers.

Meta Quest 3 with its new controllers. Meta

We finally got an official look at the upcoming Quest 3 VR headset at Meta's gaming showcase. Meta's newest budget headset isn't shipping yet, but we gleaned a few details to whet your appetite.

Read more
The 10 best ChatGPT Plugins you can use right now
OpenAI's website open on a MacBook, showing ChatGPT plugins.

ChatGPT is an amazing tool, but plugins make it even more so by unlocking a range of exciting new abilities. From booking a restaurant table for you to custom designing t-shirts based on your prompts, ChatGPT plugins are the future of AI chatbots. Until the next big thing comes along, at least.

Here are some of the best ChatGPT plugins you can use to leverage AI in ways you never even dreamed of.
How to use ChatGPT plugins
In order to run ChatGPT with plugins enabled, you need to be a ChatGPT Plus subscriber. It's $20 a month, but you get priority access to the chatbot so there's almost never any waiting, and you can also use advanced features like the GPT-4 language model, and play with the new web-search capabilities of ChatGPT.

Read more