Monday, 2 January 2023

HTC’s Next Consumer Headset Reportedly Called ‘Vive XR Elite’, Listed at $1,400

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HTC’s upcoming standalone VR headset, which is said to compete with Meta for consumer dollars, may have just suffered a fairly important leak ahead of its promised CES 2023 unveiling this week. HTC seems to have tipped its hand by inadvertently releasing the name and pricing of the headset through its Korean storefront.

Update (January 2nd, 2023): Twitter user Inscothen has managed to find a short-lived listing on HTC’s Korean storefront that lists Vive XR Elite as its upcoming standalone headset, the very same set to be unveiled at CES this week.

The headset is listed for ₩1,790,000 (~$1,400). It’s impossible to say at this point whether that will be close to the official US pricing, although other headsets listed in Korean won are fairly similar to that in USD. A webcache of the page can be viewed here.

That would put Vive XR Elite in competition with Meta’s $1,500 Quest Pro, at least in terms of pricing strategy. It remains to be seen what sort of specs the headset is delivering though, and whether it offers a similar enough experience to Quest Pro to truly call it a competitor. Check back soon for all of the official information, which will arrive at some point during CES 2023 this week, January 5-8.

Brad Lynch (SadleyItsBradley) also posted photos of the alleged Vive XR Elite, which we’ve included below this update.

Original Article (December 16th, 2022): As reported in an exclusive by The Verge, HTC is getting ready to stretch outside the enterprise and business sector once again and offer what HTC global head of product Shen Ye calls a “small, light all-in-one headset that promises full-featured virtual and augmented reality.”

Ye calls it an effort to create something “meaningful and that’s appealing for consumers,” further stating that it’s the culmination of lessons learned from making HTC Vive Flow and the Vive Focus 3.

It’s also likely to be more expensive than the $400 Quest 2, which will be a sticking point if it truly wants to be a consumer-first device, and not a prosumer headset like Quest Pro:

“We’re in an era when consumer VR headsets have been massively subsidized by companies that are trying to vacuum up and take personal data to provide to advertisers,” Ye tells The Verge. “We don’t believe the way that we want to approach it is to compromise on privacy.”

Image courtesy HTC via The Verge

Ye also revealed a few specs ahead of the official info dump:

The unnamed standalone headset is said to offer color passthrough MR, making it more similar to Quest Pro as opposed to a see-through AR such as HoloLens. The upcoming headset is said to contain a depth sensor, which would in theory offer more accurate room mapping. It’s also said to feature better dynamic range, making it capable of better passthrough for things like reading text on a monitor or smartphone. The headset also packs two hours of battery life, and supports 6DOF VR controllers along with optical hand tracking.

It’s said to be “one of the lightest that’s on the market,” although there are still a few mysteries to unveil. It’s uncertain whether it will include eye-tracking, although HTC has a track record of releasing eye-tracking modules which it may pursue here as well. Privacy protections is also a concern that HTC hopes to address regarding its externally facing cameras, although they haven’t said anything definite yet.

HTC’s unnamed headset reportedly suffered a leak of its design and some key specs back in November, which showed off the outer shell and alleged dual 1,920×1,920 LCDs clocked up to 120hz, mechanical IPD adjustments, pancake lenses, headstrap adjustment mechanism and back-mounted battery.

Allegedly Leaked Design of HTC’s MR Standalone | Image courtesy Brad Lynch

At the time, VR analyst and YouTuber Brad Lynch alleged the leak also included some vague info on its chipset being “faster than the [Snapdragon XR2] in Quest 2,” as it’s speculated to possibly be the upcoming Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2.

None of the information from the leak has been confirmed however, so we’ll just have to wait and see at CES 2023, which takes place January 5-8 in Las Vegas, Nevada.



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