South Korea has certified the ‘PlayStation VR2 PC Adapter.

The RRA’s approval is required to sell a device with wireless capabilities in that market, just as it would be for the FCC. As with the FCC, the RRA’s approval is necessary to sell a device with wireless capabilities in that market.

was granted to Sony Interactive Entertainment, the subsidiary of Sony responsible for PlayStation.

This comes three months after Sony

The licence it plans to let PSVR 2 owners “access additional games on PC” this year.

Sony Working On PC Support For PlayStation VR2

Sony is testing letting PSVR 2 owners “access additional games on PC”, and plans to ship this capability this year.

Sony didn’t specify how exactly that “access” would work, leading to speculation that it may be a Steam Link style streaming solution or even cloud streaming. The PSVR 2 cable is a USB-C with a 12V connector, DisplayPort data and USB3 power. It also has one USB-C port. This could be handled by the now-dead VirtualLink USB-C ports that were present on some NVIDIA 20-series and AMD RX 6000 series cards, but that would limit PSVR 2 support to only these specific outdated cards.officially announcedSupporting other graphics cards requires either a VirtualLink adapter or a custom adapter that can split the DisplayPort and USB 3 data while providing 12V power via power supply input.

This adapter should make PlayStation VR2 the only recent PC-capable VR headset with OLED panels that has built-in tracking and comes with controllers, and by far the most affordable.firmware updateIf you’re willing to take the risk that Sony could potentially cancel this adapter before bringing it to market, PSVR 2 is currently believe, meaning you can grab it for $450.

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