Oculus Quest Pro leaks as Facebook’s metaverse plans begin taking shape

2021/10/25 Innoverview Read

A leak showing the alleged Oculus Quest Pro has emerged as Facebook begins its transition into a metaverse company.

The metaverse is essentially a next-generation version of the web in which users share a persistent 3D world using technologies like VR and 5G. Naturally, it poses a long-term threat to social networks as they exist today.

In June, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg told his employees that the social giant’s current divisions – focusing on communities, creators, commerce, and VR – would come together and help the firm transition into a metaverse company.

“What I think is most interesting is how these themes will come together into a bigger idea,” Zuckerberg said in a remote address. “Our overarching goal across all of these initiatives is to help bring the metaverse to life.”

Interest in the metaverse has skyrocketed amid the pandemic as companies and individuals seek to find new ways of working and socialising that can largely endure rapidly-changing modern threats, from deadly viruses to unpredictable weather conditions and environmental disasters.

Last week, IoT news reported that Facebook plans to hire 10,000 Europeans to work on the metaverse.

Facebook-owned Oculus is the biggest household name in VR. As of Q1 2021, Oculus is expected to have sold an estimated 1.87 million of its standalone Quest 2 headset. Earlier this year, Facebook Reality Labs VP Andrew Bosworth said the Quest 2 has sold more units than all other Oculus headsets – including its more powerful PC-tethered versions – combined.

The demand for standalone VR is clearly high and Facebook/Oculus appears to be wanting to capitalise on the momentum with a new Quest model that looks to fit in with the company’s metaverse ambitions.

Oculus Quest Pro

Twitter user Bastian – who credits Samulia – posted a thread of videos showing tutorials for an unannounced headset that are reportedly from the firmware for Seacliff, a hardware codename present in the Oculus Quest firmware since at least August 2020.

In the first video, an avatar is shown responding to a user’s full body and facial movements:

Quest Pro / Seacliff [thread]

found by Samulia in the Seacliff firmware 
pic.twitter.com/0pGODx2HCp

— Bastian