The Oculus Rift and Touch bundle is on sale for $399
The Oculus Rift and Oculus Touch are getting a big (but
temporary) price drop: for the next six weeks, the VR headset and
motion controller bundle will sell for $399, nearly a $200 discount to
the normal price. It’s part of Oculus’ summer-long attempt to promote
the Rift, now that it’s been out for over a year. According to Oculus VP
of content Jason Rubin, the sale is meant to draw people who “may have
been sitting on the sideline because of price,” and entice people who
may not have been considering the Rift to look at its growing app and
game library.
The summer sale follows a permanent price drop
this spring, when the Rift and Touch each got $100 cheaper. (This new
sale doesn’t affect buying them individually — the Rift alone will still
be $499, and Touch $99.) Echoing what we heard back then, Rubin
promises that the current-generation Rift is still far from the end of
its lifespan. “Somebody who goes out and buys a Rift [on sale] is not
going to find themselves with hardware that’s outdated any time soon,”
he says. “The Rift is going to be driving a lot of enjoyment for people
for many years.”
Rubin says that’s because “the hardware is not holding up
VR adoption. It’s price and content, and now that we've kind of gotten
to the point where we feel comfortable with content, we're continuing to
attack price.”
Buyers will still need a gaming computer to use the Rift,
and there’s no bundle discount for them as part of this sale. However,
Rubin notes that the price of an Oculus-approved PC has dropped steadily
over the past year, especially after Oculus introduced a lower minimum specification — you can now get one for around $650.
(The Rift also works with some gaming laptops now, which also makes it
more appealing to people who have more money but don’t want a desktop.)
“The PC is very quickly not becoming the expensive part of the VR
equation,” he says. “And we want to make sure that the VR hardware
itself isn't an expensive part of the equation. So we're headed toward
mass-market pricing.”
The article was published on : theverge
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