Home / Channel / General Tech / Oculus Rift to support first 360 movie

Oculus Rift to support first 360 movie

Condition One, a developer of mobile software that allows user interaction with video playback (you control the camera angle), has announced that it's begun development of the world's first 3D, 360 degree movie where the viewer will be able to decide where they look at all times, thanks to its compatibility with the Oculus Rift.

Called Zero Point, the film is focused on the pioneering developers of the technology, following the researchers and developers as they build on the original Rift and develop it into a virtual reality experience generator. It will be broadcast to the viewers in full stereoscopic 3D, with a 360 degrees virtual screen.

oculusrift
Don't try this at home kids

“Our software is capable of projecting high-resolution video at high frame rates into a full virtual sphere, with stereoscopic images and full head tracking,” said Condition One via its blog (thanks PCGamesN). This creates a powerful sense of being inside the video – giving the viewer an unparalleled sense of scale and depth as they look around. It’s like sitting in a 3D IMAX theater, except the screen surrounds you on all sides. We hope to help pioneer a new era of virtual reality through advanced graphics engineering and content innovation.”

Of course this sort of thing will be perfect with the documentary/movie that Condition One is looking at making. For a traditional movie it might be harder, but I'd love to see the results. Horror movies could turn on the viewer, with characters suddenly breaking the 4th wall in a new fashion – attacking the viewer, or at least acknowledging their prescence.

KitGuru Says: A horror movie where you can look wherever you want could be pretty terrifying. Imagine looking away during a death scene only to look back and find the supernatural ghost, girl, thing standing right in-front of you staring at the “camera.” 

Become a Patron!

Check Also

Samsung will reportedly replace silicon with glass interposers in 2028

Samsung might be about to change how its foundries produce chips. According to a new …

We've noticed that you are using an ad blocker.

Thank you for visiting KitGuru. Our news and reviews teams work hard to bring you the latest stories and finest, in-depth analysis.

We want to be as informative as possible – and to help our readers make the best buying decisions. The mechanism we use to run our business and pay some of the best journalists in the world, is advertising.

If you want to support KitGuru, then please add www.kitguru.net to your ad blocking whitelist or disable your adblocking software. It really makes a difference and allows us to continue creating the kind of content you really want to read.

It is important you know that we don’t run pop ups, pop unders, audio ads, code tracking ads or anything else that would interfere with the KitGuru experience. Adblockers can actually block some of our free content, such as galleries!