Thanks for the recommendation. I will keep it in mind when I eventually purchase the device.With the Quest devices using a player on the device is the way to go as streaming from the PC (whether wireless or wired) does have compression.
The XR2 chip from the Quest2 is powerful enough to play 8k videos without any problems, the chip from the Quest 3 is supposed to be even faster.
When you get a Quest2/3 you should definitely look into HereSphere (https://heresphere.itch.io/heresphere-vr-video-player-quest-2). Its mentioned a couple of times in this thread and this player does enhance immersion a lot.
I have seen NAS mentioned here and there. Hm... I am a very simple individual - playing the files directly from the device is more up my alley, though I do acknowledge the lacking storage capacity and slow transfer speeds. I currently have 11 full VR videos - 238GB. My previous collection of 2D JAV was around 200GB for a little over 30 videos. Streaming from NAS does remove this limitation, but I'm just very lazy, haha. The simpler, the better. Though expensive, I'd much rather have a powerful laptop/pc and use a tethered PC vr instead. That is the end goal for me. The Quest will be my introduction to this world. A part of me wishes to wait and save up for a powerful enough rig, but I cannot bring myself to wait.Actually my suggestion would be to go with the cheapest (smallest storage) model. While it may sound like a good idea to play the files directly from the device, most people don't do that for two reasons:
1)VR videos are huge and transfering (at least to the Quest 2) does take a lot of time, the internal memory is not really fast.
2)Even the storage of the bigger models is filled up really quickly as VR videos are very large in size (also most people do have at least some games installed)
What most people do is to stream (your files) from your computer (or even better from your NAS if you have one). Its much faster, easy to set up (Samba network shares or DLNA) and does have some nice medialibrary options like XBVR for the advanced users with a lot of movies.
That way the only limitation is the hard drive of your computer (you could easily expand that with a cheap external drive).
Yes, the relatively poor resolution compared to Western material is a sentiment I have seen throughout this VR thread. It is something I have deliberated on. Have a number of nitpicks with 2D JAV - I'm sure 3D comes with its own unique quirks. I have two videos from NHVR that I am looking forward to viewing, one older and one newer - hope I am not let down.VR porn is a great experience for sure and especially JAV VR is so much ahead compared to western VR porn, but unfortunately the relatively low resolution is an issue. You might think that 4k is more than sharp enough, but keep in mind that you are watching the video with the display only centimeters in front of your eyes, to the image will a lot less sharp than what you see on your computer screen. So many times I was excited with a video and it looked great on the computer, but when watching it on the VR headset the image quality destroyed that experience (unfortunately NHVR often got terrible visual quality).
FANZA has been teasering an 8k video which is a big improvement but no release so far (reasons for that still unknown).
I think one major difference between 2D and 3D is that, because it will feel so much more realistic that you will be much more petty in terms of image quality, lightning, colors etc.
In 2D the experience is basically the same whether you watch it on a cheap monitor or an expensive 4k screen. I never even bothered adjusting any colors.
In 3D JAV its different because it actually makes your brain think you are really there (and thats what gives you this unique experience). The downside is that everything that takes you "out" of this simulation with affect your experience.
I.e. the Pico 4 is a nice headset but it does not support 60hz or 120Hz and therefore you have some kind of microstutter which does really affect immersion. Quest 3 is supposed to support 120hz, otherwise it would be a dealbreaker for me.
Another, simple, immersion breaker would be the audio. If you watch a video and you are not using headphones and hear noices from your neighbourhood it could break immersion, so good headphones ideally with some kind of noice cancelling are really recommended.
This list could go on and on, ultimate goal is to have as least "immersion breakers" as possible.
Having briefly peeked into the audiophile world, I have an appreciation for choosing the most suitable headphone for the occasion. I prefer wired headphones, though the ones I have my eye on are reported to be decent for sound cancelling, without having any ANC tech. Good to keep in mind. I'll amend my setup to maximise immersion when the time comes.