VR Season — By launching next year, Sony’s avoiding the introduction of Meta’s “Quest Pro,” which is expected to be an expensive and impressive demonstration of where mixed-reality experiences can go. Meta already has a large catalog of VR games that it either owns or hosts in its storefront, so it is, in some ways at least, direct competition for Sony, even if PlayStation attracts bigger developers than the creators of Facebook do.
It’s unlikely Sony is actively trying to avoid getting drowned out by whatever Meta announces this fall, but it’s ironic that launching in early 2023 will put PS VR2 directly in the splash zone of Apple’s long-rumored mixed-reality headset. Like its consoles, though, what will matter more than anything is the games the PS VR2 can play — and whether anyone has the PS5 to run them.
PS5 availability — Things seem to be improving on that front too. The PS5 is a notoriously difficult console to purchase, but things have gotten better over the last few months. Sony regularly sells PS5s directly on its website, there’s a PS5 bundle miraculously still in stock right now, and the situation should only improve heading into next year.
Waiting to launch PS VR2 is really only going to help make it easier to use, assuming Sony doesn’t have problems keeping its VR hardware in stock in the same way it does its console.