Unity and Steam VR Unite for Native Vive Support
Unity Technologies last week announced that the Unity Platform has been retooled to offer native support for Steam VR, the software foundation for Rift rival HTC Vive.
The move will save effort and resources, whether developers build made-for-VR titles or merely build virtual reality support into traditional games.
In addition, Valve, the company behind Steam and Steam VR, introduced an advanced rendering plug-in developed for Unity.
Because Valve has been a major player in the game industry, it was clear that supporting Steam VR would be a part of Unity's strategy, Unity spokesperson Marcos Sanchez said.
"From the macro level, bringing developers access to all the major platforms and operating systems -- Oculus, Google, Sony, Microsoft with HoloLens, and now Valve -- we open the potential for success by broadening the audiences they can reach," he told Tech News World. "We want to solve the hard problems for devs so they can focus on creating amazing games and experiences."
AR and VR in Focus
Unity Technologies has been baking general VR and augmented reality support into the platform, according to Sanchez. A big portion of its 400-plus engineers have been focusing exclusively on developing AR and VR content.
"Unity is recruiting some of the most talented folks from the most specialized, high-end game companies in the world to make Unity better," he said.
"Palmer Luckey of Oculus recently noted, at the Vision AR/VR Summit, that over 90 percent of the content created for Samsung's Gear VR was made with Unity, which is a staggering amount," Sanchez added.
Battle Lines
The gold rush isn't quite on, as established players in the video game industry have, so far, dispatched prospectors into VR territory. However, game makers have been stepping up their efforts to explore VR, as there's a growing consensus in the industry that VR is for real this time.
It's a huge risk to appropriate too much of a company's resources for a nascent, untested sector of the market, but the game industry started to rally around VR, and alliances will start to emerge as a result, according to Joost van Dreunen, CEO of Super Data Research.
"Everybody knows that they can't all have a successful platform of their own and that the market will, at least to the extent that history is a reliable guidepost here, eventually settle on two or three devices," he told Tech News World.
To mitigate the risk of betting on VR, companies understand how important it is to integrate their technologies with other groups and to "play nice early on," noted van Dreunen.
"Especially considering the active indie development community around Steam, it makes a lot of sense for Unity and Valve to team up. In the early stages of a new platform, offering an innovative, killer application is key to stimulate consumer adoption," he said.
For Unity's part, it's hedging its VR bets on "one of the most powerful game delivery systems," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group.
"Unity's support of Steam VR assures they will remain a popular and powerful developer platform if and when VR becomes as popular as it is expected to become," he told Tech News World.

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