SteamVR Driver for Vision Pro & Controller support now in Development



The developer leading the push to make PSVR 2 compatible with PC VR games says they’re working on a SteamVR driver that aims to bring unofficial SteamVR support to Vision Pro, controllers and all.

You may have heard earlier this week that independent programmer Zhuowei Zhang had installed a modified version of Wi-Fi PC streaming app ALVR on Vision Pro, which gave users the first look at SteamVR compatibility.

Now iVRy, a project dedicated to bringing SteamVR support to officially unsupported headsets such as PSVR 2, says they’re turning their gaze to Vision Pro as well.

Since iVRy’s announcement yesterday, Valve has actually approved the iVRy Driver for Vision Pro, a paid app that the creator also hopes to offer through Apple’s App Store.

There’s no word on when we can expect it. It may take a long time before it’s fully functional. As UploadVR notes, it could be a few months. The team has stated in they are adding support for Quest Pro Controllers to iVRy Driver. However, this will require Quest 2/3 to act as an ad-hoc

control hub. The software also supports other controller ecosystems, such as SteamVR (aka Lighthouse) tracking, which critically requires not only its own base stations to run, but either a headset to work as a controller hub, or a special dongle to bypass that need, doesn’t support them natively.

That said, iVRy for Vision Pro isn’t exactly promising a plug-and-play experience. If you want to play Half-Life: Alyx (2010) a post on Xon this $3,500 device, you might as well buy a separate SteamVR-compatible headset (Quest 2/3/Pro or Pico 4). Valve Index. You’ll be left waiting and will also need to be passionate in kitbashing VR eco-systems.

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