Today Meta made what is likely to be an industry-altering announcement: it plans to open up the Quest operating system to third-party device makers. Asus, Lenovo, and Xbox have been tapped to create new headsets built on the operating system which is being branded ‘Meta Horizon OS’.

Meta has just made its biggest strategic move in the XR space since betting the farm on standalone headsets over PC VR. Today the company says it’s formally branding the Quest operating system as Meta Horizon OS, and with it, plans to allow third-parties to make new headsets that run the software stack.

The company has already confirmed that Asus and Lenovo are building new headsets for Meta Horizon OS. Meta also says it’s collaborating with Microsoft on a “limited-edition Quest” that’s “inspired by Xbox,” surely leaning into the partnership which brought the Xbox Cloud Gaming app to Meta’s existing headsets.

Sharing a common operating system means all of these headsets will be able to draw not only on the XR tech that Meta has built (like tracking, interface, playspace boundary, and more) but also plug into the company’s leading library of standalone VR content. Meta says it’s rebranding its content library to the ‘Meta Horizon Store’.

Meta also says all headsets running Meta Horizon OS will share the same social layer, allowing users to use their existing accounts, avatars, and friends list no matter which of these headsets they choose.

  • Björn Tantau
    link
    fedilink
    English
    327 days ago

    Could you maybe open up the OS to your customers? At least for the devices you no longer support? Pretty please?

  • Pistcow
    link
    English
    328 days ago

    Nah, we’re good

    -Other headset manufacturers

    • @kinkles@sh.itjust.works
      link
      fedilink
      English
      527 days ago

      The company has already confirmed that Asus and Lenovo are building new headsets for Meta Horizon OS. Meta also says it’s collaborating with Microsoft on a “limited-edition Quest” that’s “inspired by Xbox,”

    • dindonmasker
      link
      fedilink
      English
      127 days ago

      Yea the support is already bad enough with their own headsets i wouldn’t want a third party meta headset…

  • @MyOpinionOP
    link
    English
    127 days ago

    We are entering into a very different VR world in the near future. The HMD’s are so close to what I want. This next generation should be just amazing. I am super excited. Will I become an Apple guy or Get the new top end headsets running Meta?

    • @fer0n@lemmy.worldM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      127 days ago

      VR headset iterations are definitely a lot more interesting than phones are, they feel way more significant.

      I‘m deep into Apple’s ecosystem (I‘m also developing iOS Apps) and I‘m super interested in the Vision Pro, but proper VR games are likely the only real reason to use a VR headset currently and Apple doesn’t seem to want to go there.

      Reading reviews it seems like the interest is dying down and people have very few reasons to come back and use their headset, which is a shame, but a core problem that VR has had since forever. Excited to see what’s coming though :)

  • @fer0n@lemmy.worldM
    link
    fedilink
    English
    127 days ago

    Making your own OS is likely very difficult, especially if it involves having your own store that developers have to submit to.

    Maybe part of the reason why they’re doing this is to have a stronger stance against google if/when they release something with the Android play store included, which seems like one of the biggest problem meta currently has.

    I wonder if the other headset makers get a cut from the games they sell on their devices. Meta is taking a hit selling the hardware and tries to make up for that with selling software. If others don’t get a cut, that likely means they’re going to be more expensive. I’m excited to see what comes from this.