- Meta Quest 2 Keep your experience smooth and seamless, even as high-speed action unfolds around you with a super-fast processor and high-resolution display.
- Experience total immersion with 3D positional audio, hand tracking, and haptic feedback, working together to make virtual worlds feel real.
- Explore an expanding universe of over 350 titles across gaming, fitness, social/multiplayer, and entertainment, including exclusive blockbuster releases and totally unique experiences.
- Travel universes in blockbuster fantasies, scare yourself witless in horror adventures, or collaborate with colleagues in innovative workspaces.
- Come together in incredible social spaces and multiplayer arenas as you take in live events with friends and family, find your new workout crew, or join quests with fellow adventurers.
- Be truly free to roam in VR With a wireless headset, intuitive controls, a built-in battery, easy setup, and no PC or console needed*
- Play without worries as an easy-to-use Guardian boundary lets you set your designated play space and alerts you if you move outside it.
- Take VR your lightweight and portable Quest 2 wherever you go in the real world.
Meta Quest 2 — Advanced All-In-One Virtual Reality Headset — 128 GB
Rated 4.29 out of 5 based on 7 customer ratings
(7 customer reviews)$359.00
- Meta Quest 2 Keep your experience smooth and seamless, even as high-speed action unfolds around you with a super-fast processor and high-resolution display.
- Experience total immersion with 3D positional audio, hand tracking, and haptic feedback, working together to make virtual worlds feel real.
Last updated on 18:26 Details
SKU: 1CA49C18
Category: Steam Deck
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Release date | August 23, 2021 |
---|---|
Pricing | The strikethrough price is the List Price. Savings represents a discount off the List Price. |
Product Dimensions | 10.24 x 7.36 x 4.96 inches, 1.83 Pounds |
Binding | Video Game |
Language | None |
Item model number | 899-00182-02 |
Item Weight | 1.83 pounds |
Manufacturer | Facebook Technologies, LLC |
Country of Origin | China |
Batteries | 4 AA batteries required. (included) |
Date First Available | July 21, 2021 |
7 reviews for Meta Quest 2 — Advanced All-In-One Virtual Reality Headset — 128 GB
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Martha Angélica Pacheco Leon –
El visor es muy bueno para lo que cuesta. El precio real debería rondar entre 6000-6200 pesos. Sin embargo, para ser un precio mexicano se me hace entendible por la tarifa de importación.
Ahora sí viene lo bueno: La experiencia. Es un visor de realidad virtual que demuestra calidad desde el unboxing, tal vez lo único criticable desde mi perspectiva sería la banda de la cabeza, pero se entiende totalmente porque oculus vende la correa elite por separado. La banda de cabeza no es incómoda, simplemente no va de acuerdo a la calidad percibida del producto en general, simplemente si puedes comprar la elite o una genérica, entonces sería lo mejor que puedes hacer.
La experiencia de juegos es simplemente irreal, sumamente inmersivo y si le sumas el hecho de que puedes vincularla directamente a tu pc entonces se vuelve un game changer (si tienes una computadora que pueda correr los juegos). No considero necesario usarlo con un PCVR, pero se agradece demasiado poder hacerlo con un router casero con apenas 3-8 ms de latencia desde una habitación diferente conectado a la red de 2.5ghz. Si quieres desconectarte un par de horas del mundo (porque eso es lo que en promedio dura su batería) y pasar un buen rato, esta es la opción a tomar. Respecto a la batería, aunque pueda parecer algo escasa, es suficiente si tomamos en cuenta la necesidad de descansar los ojos, de todos modos si requieres más tiempo puedes conectarte directamente al pc adquiriendo cualquier cable usb 3.2 a usb c o a un powerbank de diversas capacidades para alargar tus sesiones de VR.
Si esperas una calidad visual cercana a la que tenemos en el mundo real, entonces te recomiendo que inviertas en visores del doble o triple de precio, pero por este precio considero competente la percepción de los objetos renderizados por el visor por sí mismo y vía PC es sobresaliente, pero con puntos a destacar como lo son el texto que por lo que entiendo en casi cualquier visor de uso no profesional suelen notarse algo borrososos en algunos ángulos de visión, pero es cuestión de explorar y encontrar los puntos de enfoque de la visión para poder leer sin mayor esfuerzo texto en esta plataforma. Satisfecho 100% con esta compra.
Edit: Desafortunadamente a la semana y media de uso murieron un par de pixeles justo en el centro, por lo que opté por devolverlo para posteriormente pedir otro que no tenga este defecto, así que por esto cambio mi calificación de 5 a 4 estrellas.
Ben Harman –
Was there a Quest or a Quest 1? I don’t think so. Why did FB/Meta start at 2? I have no idea. Maybe there was a Quest 1 and it ended up on the scrapheap for some reason and we never saw it.
Anyway, the BIG NEWS with the Quest 2 is that you no longer need to hook up to a laptop/PC and so no longer need an expensive graphics card. The Oculus Rift cost about the same if a bit more than the Quest 2, but to operate it, you needed a graphics card that would set you back at least several hundred dollars. Worse than that, though, that required you to have a higher end PC, so instead of, say, a $500 Dell Inspiron, you were looking at having to have, say, a $2,000 Dell XPS. That was a major roadblock to mass availability of VR that FB/Meta took away by introducing the Quest 2 and putting the Rift out to pasture.
Now that all sounds very 5 stars, and maybe it should be, so why am I only giving 4 stars?
1. It’s not as cool as I thought it’d be and I don’t use it as much as I thought I would. The games/apps cost between $9.99 and $39.99, from what I’ve seen, but even the most popular game, Beat Saber for $29.99, which is kind of like Dance Dance Revolution (DDR) but with a light saber, isn’t that cool, even if on paper it sounds cool. It’s not bad, just kinda meh.
2. I don’t know if it’s my head or my eye placement or what, but I have a real issue with eyes strain using it and, most of all, with getting double vision I can’t resolve no matter what I do, namely repositioning the headset and adjusting how far apart lenses inside are. Now, I do wear glasses and thought it might’ve been because of that and because of the spacer for glasses wearers provided with the Quest 2 to allow extra room inside the headset for glasses, so since I can see OK without glasses, no like I’m blind or anything, I tried taking that spacer out and going without glasses, same thing. For whatever reason, I can see just as well without my glasses in the headset, so that’s good, but the issue of eye strain and occasional double vision that I can’t resolve is exactly the same.
3. The spacer for eyeglasses leaves a small open space or gap between the spacer and the body of the Quest 2 along the nose such that if you glance down with your eyes, you can see outside, see light, and even when you don’t, it lets outside light in, so that’s poorly designed.
4. You need a fairly large open space of floor with absolutely nothing on it or anything next to it, like walls, stuff on counters, shelves, etc. You can play with a smaller space, but you’re constantly getting alerted by a big wall of plus signs that you’re reaching the edge of your safe space. Now, one thing that’s cool is if you leave the space, cross that wall of plus signs, you no longer see the game but get a black and white video feed of what’s in front of you, of your surroundings, kinda like looking at your home through a low-res black and white security camera. Now, I do have just barely enough space, but the problem I run into is that you actually need a somewhat larger space since gameplay will often result in your arms that space, so if you’ve outlined a safe space or play area that’s big enough but there’s a counter, table, shelf, whatever not in it but right next to it, you will can find your hand knocking into whatever’s on that counter, table, shelf, whatever and maybe knocking it off or over or whatever, so it seems like the easy solution for people who don’t have big open areas of flat floorspace with nothing surrounding it in their homes would be to play it outside, which brings me to my next point…
5. You can’t play it outside. Nowhere in any of the instructions does it say you can’t use it outside, like it literally won’t work outside, so when I tried to use it outside, I thought it had broken. The headset has sensors all over it that must use the walls and ceiling to bounce off of, so when there are no walls or ceiling, it literally freaks out. The controllers work, sort of, but not really. Instead of seeing them in your hands, like you normally can with the headset on, you’ll see the controllers 10 or 15 feet away all on top of each other, and you use the menu buttons and fire buttons, but you can’t aim, or can only sort of aim because it thinks the hand controllers are 10 or 15 feet away and not positioned like you have them positioned. Now, it seems like with games like Pokemon Go and with so many people not having the rather large amount of space needed to use the Quest 2 that outside wood be a perfect solution, like in a park or in my backyard or in my driveway. When I googled it, I found out that my Quest 2 wasn’t broken, but what I was reading was spinning it to be like it didn’t work on purpose outside for my safety and not that it’s a shortcoming of the Quest 2, which is what it totally is. One interesting thing that I did learn, though, is that the magnifying lenses in the Quest 2 should never be left in direct sunlight, not outside nor inside on a windowsill because if direct sunlight hits it, the sunlight hitting it will be like sunlight hitting a magnifying glass, only it’ll focus it on the display screen inside and burn through it lickety-split. So that’s A CRITICALLY IMPORTANT THING TO KNOW THAT’S NEVER MENTIONED IN THE MATERIAL YOU GET WITH THE QUEST 2 WHEN YOU BUY IT.
Now that all may make it sound WORSE than it is. Those are my criticisms. Still, it’s a pretty dang cool piece of tech, especially for the price. It’s just not what I thought it’d be, so I’m going to be giving mine to my nephew.
ANOTHER IMPORTANT PIECE OF INFORMATION: 64GB for $100 less vs. 128GB for $100 more
I spent the extra $100 and bought the 128GB one because I didn’t want it going obsolete or running short on memory or whatever. If I had it to do all over again, I’d have saved myself the hundred bucks and bought the 64GB one, not because I’m giving it away but because there’s no way you’d ever use 64GB, much less 128GB.
What the storage is for isn’t RAM, so it has no effect on performance, but is strictly for storing games, file storage. Each game, though, is only about 1GB, so before you’d ever use up 64GB, you’d have to have more than 60 apps/games on there. Setting aside that’s around $1,800 in apps/games and just a crazy amount in my mind, even if you are that heavy a user and do have that much stuff, it doesn’t matter because you can use a USB cable and put games you’re not using or don’t plan to use on a library that can store them on an app or even through a cell phone app on a cloud, so you’d only ever actually need more than 64GB and so pay the extra $100 for the 128GB version is if you actually want to have access to 60 to 120 games and apps all at the same time without having to swap games/apps out with others in your library. Now, you may be thinking of future-proofing, that there will come a time when the games/apps are 2GB or 3GB or 5GB or whatever and so don’t want to be caught short, but you won’t be, or you will be, but it won’t matter. The reason games/apps are only around 1GB each is going much bigger than that would push or exceed the limits of the Quest 2’s processors and internal RAM. That means that when down the road games/apps grow much larger than what they are now, it’ll be time to upgrade from the Quest 2 to whatever’s next. There’s no avoiding that by spending an extra $100 for 128GB of onboard storage instead of 64GB. Now, when the Quest 2 first came out last year, it came out with only 32GB at the same price it is now with 64GB. 32GB wasn’t enough storage, so FB/Meta quickly remedied that by making a 64GB for $100 more, but then it obsoleted the 32GB version and dropped the price of the 64GB to the same as what the 32GB one had been. FB/Meta then added the 128GB option because of people demanding it after panicking from the 32GB one not being enough that they thought 64GB wouldn’t be either or soon wouldn’t be. But it’s totally unnecessary and a waste of $100. If you don’t believe me, just research it for yourself. EVERYONE says so, and having lived it myself now, I fully agree.
SAVE YOURSELF $100 AND BUY THE 64GB QUEST 2…
…BECAUSE YOU WILL ALMOST CERTAINLY NEVER EVER USE UP EVEN THE 64GB, MUCH LESS EVER NEED 128GB, AND IF YOU SOMEHOW WOULD EVER HAVE MORE THAN 64GB IN APPS/GAMES, YOU CAN SIMPLY STORE EXCESS LESSER USED APPS ON ANOTHER DEVICE/CLOUD THAT YOU CAN REDOWNLOAD THEM FROM SHOULD YOU EVER WANT THEM ONBOARD YOUR QUEST 2 AGAIN LATER, BECAUSE THAT 64GB IS JUST ONBOARD STORAGE CAPACITY, NOT TOTAL STORAGE CAPACITY, WHICH WITH A PC/CLOUD, SKY’S THE LIMIT.
Dinesh –
Fresnel lens added ghosting effect or blur effect which is major draw back to buy this
Chromatic abberation is still visible (red & blue fringes) even after 4 years of evolution
This is a AR/VR Game Devoloper review
Still there is room for improvement. I’m comparing quest2 with my old device “s8+ with gear vr”
GearVR Samsung S8+(2017) Vs quest 2(2021)
s8+ 1480×1440
q2 1832 x1920(still pixels are visible)
s8+ 3500mAh
q2 3640mAh
s8+ Convex lens
q2 fresnel lens with added (ghosting effect or blur effect) biggest disappointment
Not Solved : Chromatic abberation (red & blue fringes) after 4 years of evolution
510 vs 503 grams – no big difference still heavy to wear
s8+ focal adjustment
q2 No focal adjustment
Juan D. –
Primeramente, el visor es de lo mejor qué hay en el mercado CONSIDERANDO el precio; un valve index es MUY caro, pero tiene adiciones qué el Quest 2 no y viceversa; eso es lo que lo hace un gran visor a comparación de los de tope de gama.
Si tienes planeado usarlo para jugar en tu computadora:
1) Necesitas una GPU y CPU capaces de correr realidad virtual.
2) Requieres de un cable adicional cómo el Oculus Link, SIN EMBARGO, existen cables genéricos cómo alternativas, que son mejores, y más largos.
2.1) Si vas a comprar un cable genérico, asegurate de qué sea:
USB-C 3.1 a USB-C 3.1 ó USB-A 3.1 a USB C; estos cables rondan entre los 490-780 pesos mexicanos por el simple hecho de ser 3.1, ES OBLIGATORIO que sean 3.1 y no 2.0, porque de lo contrario vas a gastar de más al darte cuenta que vas a tener un rendimiento pobre, no gastes 200 o 300 mxn para después gastar otros 500 mxn.
3) Una nueva correa o headstrap; sí, las reseñas eran ciertas; el headstrap o correa que viene por defecto es un dolor de cabeza (literalmente) es un mal diseño ya que no distribuye de forma homogénea el peso del viso sobre tu cabeza y por ende se vuelve incómodo a la larga.
Yo compre el BOBOVR M2 y es una maravilla, tomando casi el diseño del Rift s, el soporte que te da en el occipital y la facilidad de ajustarlo lo hacen un aditamento indispensable.
Y eso es todo lo que yo considero necesario para poder disfrutar el visor al máximo.
Edit: RECOMIENDO USAR OCULUS LINK, SI EL CABLE ALTERNATIVO LES LLEGA A FALLAR, YA NO COMPREN DE ESE TIPO, VAYANSE A LA SEGURA Y USEN EL ORIGINAL, AUNQUE SEA MÁS CARO.
Eugene W. Maloney –
First, a little background. I’m 73 years old. Above average in the activity department, adept mentally, although I am literally the only person I know who can lose something when standing perfectly still. I have four grandchildren. I hold down a full-time job as a writer, and a once-a-year gig teaching Rio Grande Board Games at the annual World Boardgaming Championships (WBC).
It was at the most recent WBC that I was introduced to MetaQuest 2 and in particular, its bundled game called Beat Saber. I’d tried much cheaper VR systems, the ones that hold your phone and you have to download apps to run on them. This was an entirely different ball game. This was, I should note, not a function of the WBC. It just so happened that one of the site administrators had brought the system along with him and one evening, invited me to give it a try.
The first issue that one should note is that once you put the headset for this system on, you are pretty much detached from the reality around you. This is fine as long as it’s just you and the machine, but you can forget about being outside the machine and trying to instruct someone inside the machine about what’s going on. As it happened, the man who introduced me to the system basically set it up for me – put it on his own head, clicked the right buttons – and then transferred the headset to me. With a couple of hand prompts and a word or two, Beat Saber, the program that comes with the MetaQuest 2 when you buy it these days, came on line and there I stood, with two controllers, one in each hand, as my eyes beheld on the screen in front of me, a series of square blocks coming at me, each with an arrow, pointing either up, down, right or left. The controllers operate two light sabers, one in each hand, and the object of this game is to swat the approaching blocks in the direction indicated by the arrow on them. There are also occasional large obstacles coming at you, like skinny walls, which appear like three-dimensional line drawings as they approach. You can’t swat these aside and the idea is to avoid them. In most cases, this entails just stepping out of their way, either to the right or the left, but dependent on some choices you make in Beat Saber, some of these objects can be wide and impossible to avoid unless you duck as they approach. No way to jump over them.
And there’s music. At first, you don’t pick up on the idea that your swatting activity with the light sabers can occasionally be rhythmic, linked to the beat of the music. . .Beat Saber. Get it? But you’ll pick up on that fairly quickly. If you don’t dance and would like to, this is a good program that will force-feed you the concept of moving your body in beat with the rhythm of a song. You don’t realize you’re dancing because as far as you’re concerned, you’re swatting colored boxes with virtual reality light sabers. A note of caution. People familiar with the system and how it works will delight in recording video of your attempts to play the game; unbeknowst to you, ’cause you’re wrapped up in the headset and can’t see anything but what the machine is giving you to see. These people recording you will be LOL-ing themselves breathless, as you contort yourself in a relatively confined space, trying to dodge things and swat at the colored boxes.
I made the mistake of failing to heed the warning that if I didn’t buy one of these systems soon, its price was going to go up. A lot. And it did. But I bought it anyway and am just beginning to tap into the available free apps and exploring the possibility of buying other ones.
There’s a free Epic Roller Coaster app, which is fairly enjoyable, although oddly enough, both myself and my wife (now at home with our own MetaQuest 2) found ourselves getting a little queasy during the experience. Not sure what that’s about. She NEVER goes on real roller coasters and I do it all the time.
Also found a walking-on-a-building-skeleton app that had me God knows how many stories high and though not generally afraid of heights (acrophobia), I wasn’t all that keen on walking on the available, skinny steel walkways to approach the edge. I’m in my living room, my mind knowing damn full well that I’m not only not as high as the program makes me think I am, but am, in fact, on solid ground. Yet, in an attempt to approach the edge and have a look OVER the edge, I am literally creeping forward, edging my foot out in front of me, making sure of my balance with each step. My mind absolutely refuses to grasp the concept that I am not in any danger.
It should be noted that when you play in virtual reality, the mechanism has you define a space where you are going to be, literally drawing a perimeter line. It’s not because the machine is worried you might step off the big building you only think you’re on, but when you’re playing a game like Beat Saber, you want to make sure that your arm movements don’t knock over a lamp your Aunt Ethel gave you for Christmas last year, or in moving your legs around, you don’t accidentally kick the screen out of your new Smart TV.
I haven’t been too excited by any of the first-person shooter kind of apps that are available. That kind of activity never lured me to the various systems that were already on the market. But I did notice and have been on the verge of pulling the trigger on some of the other activities, like table tennis, actual tennis and some other sports activities, like baseball. Am also interested in what is, at present, a small selection of board games, like Tsuro and chess (in a variety of different environments). They offer Catan (originally, Settlers of Catan) and though my interest in board games is strong, I never really liked Catan in real-time, so I’m not going to pick it up in VR.
I recommend this system highly. The experience of good VR (and you can buy systems better than the basic one that I purchased) is mind-altering. It’s something to which your mind has never been previously exposed; an alternate reality with its own set of rules that takes some getting used to. It’s more expensive than pot, but unlike pot, it doesn’t just let your head create new connections and free it from everyday anxieties, it creates a reality within your brain that is intriguing to watch, hear and interact with.
And as my age indicates, fun for all ages.
Oh, and one other cautionary note for those of a certain advanced age. The first time I tried the system, at the WBC, my score at Beat Saber was abysmally low. So I tried again. And again. It wasn’t my hand movements with the controllers or the side-stepping away from approaching objects that got to me. It was the ducking at things that I had to let go over my head. I made the crouching moves necessary with reckless abandon. Once, again, and again. My upper thighs complained to me all of the next day. The good news is that it makes for good, healthy exercise.
Aamir Baig –
The best value for money standalone VR headset.
Dont go for the negative review that it has bad lense or is cheap bla bla bla, cause you cant even find any VR standalone headset at this price.
1. Quality is great, even if you drop it it wont break easily and still works, check out ThrillSeeker channel on youtube for more strees test that guy did.
2. Lenses are old once, yes they are but in this segment they wont dissapoint you compared to $1000 Valve Index
3. Resolution and FOV is good but not great but perfect for movies and watching 3d movies, 360 movies and Oculus games for sure. Casual user wont even find any difference
4. Great library of games, litttle expensive but you get sales now and then and you have sidequest if you want more for free and also with some tricks you can install any android apps.
5. The glimps and your start to metaverse
6. Battery is a concern but get the cable creation cable and you are goog to go. Get the 16ft one
7. Install Sidequest. (Mobile and PC) if you want a lot of best and free content and if you are a advanced PC user. Not recommended for users not fimiliar with advance PC use or adb, but you get a tons of tutorial on youtube if you want to try.
8. If you have a good PC, VR ready GPU, then this can play Steam VR as well, now it has Airlink wireless as well, but you need Wifi6, 5ghz band and PC connected using ethernet for best quality.
9. Amazing hand tracking and controllers at this range
10. In any case you end up scratching the lenses, get a polywatch solution and see the magic, it would be as good as new, thank me later for that advice. See youtube for more info
11. Great mutiplayer capabilities, mic is great and stock speaker are just awesome, and you can still connect your own headsets as well.
12. Get a rechargable battery for your controller, cost around rs400 with batgery and its charger.
13. If you still have more money get an Elite strap for best comfort and wobble free experience.
14. If you sweat much, mind that you might see fog on lense on prolong use, there are tons of alrernatives to try to avoid that, but the cheapest option is simply put a tissue to your forehead and put on the headset and good to go.
15. You are still here that means you are convinced, just go for it and buy it, you will not regret for sure. Search me in case you need more assistance on Oculus, Ashura- is my Oculus id.
Carlos Zamora –
The media could not be loaded.
No me quedaba claro lo que había que hacer con él, ya en mis manos, pues tuve que aprender y decidí no gastar en el cable oficial que cuesta casi un 20% de lo que vale el aparato, invertí en un Router 6g, que instalé como en 15 minutos con todo y configuración. Ahora puedo jugar lo que he comprado desde mi computadora en cualquier parte de la casa, sin cables, excepto el de la batería extra. La tienda Oficial Oculus tiene costos de casi el doble, así que hago una wishlist en Steam y conforme me van avisando que están en descuento, lo voy aprovechando.
Hay que hacer gastos extras si eres jugador de hueso colorado, como yo. Hay que invertir en una correa que balancee el peso del equipo, también que tenga para sostener una batería extra porque a mí no me alcanza el tiempo que da la batería inicial. También voy a invertir en una careta y en unos lentes anti luz azul y antirreflejantes.
Lo que debo decir… Es que absolutamente vale la inversión, la Realidad Virtual tiene una cantidad de Experiencias Immersivas que no sabrás por dónde empezar y qué probar después.
Pero absolutamente vale cada centavo. Me arrepiento de dudar entre comprar éste o el PS5 por tanto tiempo. Aquí no nado en dinero, así que la duda estaba justificada.