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XR Daily: Valve's Steam Frame Comfort Wows Early Testers

· 6 min read

Valve’s Steam Frame: “The Best Comfort I’ve Had So Far”

The steady drip of Steam Frame impressions continues, and the consensus on comfort is getting hard to ignore. German VR reviewer VoodooDE, who recently complied with Valve’s request to remove Steam Frame imagery from his social accounts (despite having signed no NDA), shared his take: “Comfort much better than Quest, the rest I still not tested.”

The numbers back it up: the Steam Frame weighs in at roughly 440 grams versus the Meta Quest 3’s 515 grams. That’s a 15% reduction that matters when it’s strapped to your face for an hour. Bastiaan Olij, lead developer of Godot XR, previously noted it was comfortable with glasses, and Valve has confirmed plans to offer prescription lens inserts ahead of launch.

The Frame is the second piece of Valve’s 2026 hardware trio: the Steam Controller already launched, and the Steam Machine console is expected alongside. No release date yet, but with devkits circulating since late 2025, “hopefully soon” is the operative phrase.

PC Guide


DPVR Project Titan: 110g, 4K Per Eye, CES 2027

DPVR revealed Project Titan at VR AR Expo China last week, a PC mixed reality headset that looks like oversized sunglasses and weighs just 110 grams. For context, that’s less than a quarter of the Steam Frame.

Under the hood (or rather, under the frame): a 4K MicroOLED display per eye with a target FOV of around 100°, connecting to both Windows PCs and Android phones. The headset is built on the GravityXR reference design, but DPVR plans to push the displays from 2.5K to 4K and widen the FOV from 75° to ~100°.

There’s a catch. Skarredghost, who went hands-on at the expo, reports the current reference design “BBQ-ed my brain”: the center of the glasses ran hot enough to be unpleasant. DPVR’s fix: offload half the compute to the host machine (PC or phone) to keep the onboard Gravity X100 chip cool. Whether that works at 4K remains to be seen.

CEO Sunny Chen targets a CES 2027 launch. No price yet, but he notes that two 4K MicroOLED panels don’t come cheap.

The Ghost Howls


TideGS Trains 1 Billion+ Gaussians on a Single GPU

City-scale 3D Gaussian Splatting has a scaling problem: a full urban scene can span square kilometers and demand over a billion Gaussians, far beyond any single GPU’s memory budget. The usual answer is distributed multi-GPU training, which brings its own engineering headache.

TideGS (ICML 2026 Spotlight) takes a different approach. Researchers from HKUST, Tsinghua, and Great Wall Motor built a hybrid SSD-CPU-GPU out-of-core pipeline that keeps the full scene on SSD, streams subsets to CPU for pre-processing, and only feeds the GPU what it needs during optimization. No distributed training, no memory failures.

The result: training 1B+ Gaussian primitives on a single GPU without running out of memory. The paper targets autonomous driving scenarios (think reconstructing entire city blocks from vehicle-mounted cameras), but the implications for any large-scale 3D reconstruction workflow are significant.

Project Page (paper + code)


Flat2VR’s Spark Initiative Ships Its First Game

Flat2VR Studios’ Spark Initiative has its first official release: FlatOut 4: Total Insanity VR. In an interview with UploadVR, Chief Creative Officer Elliott Tate explained Spark as a middle ground between full studio productions and community mods: pair experienced VR modders with game developers who want their games in VR, provide source code access, and let passion drive the port with officially licensed results.

The model makes sense. Modders know VR interaction design in their bones but can’t quit their day jobs. Studios have the IP and codebase but lack VR expertise. Spark connects them, trading longer timelines for lower overhead. FlatOut 4 is the proof of concept; if it works, expect a pipeline of licensed VR ports that would’ve never happened through traditional publishing.

UploadVR


Godot 4.6.3 Drops: Stability Work Continues

Godot 4.6.3 shipped as a maintenance release while 4.7 development marches forward. The team’s commitment to active LTS-style support for the 4.6 branch means bug fixes keep flowing even as feature work accelerates on the next release. Standard upgrade advice applies: back up your project, use version control, and enjoy the stability improvements.

Godot Blog


Dolphin XR Brings Full Motion Controls to Metroid Prime

The Dolphin XR emulator now supports full VR motion controls for Metroid Prime, letting you aim Samus’s arm cannon with your actual arm. It’s a glimpse of what Nintendo’s classics could feel like with native VR interaction, and one of the strongest use cases for VR emulation yet.

YouTube showcase


Quick Bites

  • Kiln v0.2: WebGPU-native out-of-core volume rendering library hit npm. Real-time volumetric data at scale, entirely in the browser. → Reddit thread

  • NTT × U Tokyo contactless haptics: researchers demo mid-air cooling sensation without physical contact. Early-stage, but the path to believable VR temperature feedback is getting shorter. → r/virtualreality

  • Graphics Programming Weekly #441: Jendrik Illner’s latest roundup covers perspective projection matrix internals from reverse-engineering a AAA engine, plus the usual deep dives. → gpweekly.com