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Nintendo Returns to VR With $40 Headset 

The Labo VR Kit is a build-it-yourself set of cardboard goggles and controllers for Nintendo’s Switch console.

Nintendo Returns to VR With $40 Headset 
The Nintendo Co. Labo VR Kit ‘Toy-Con’ VR goggles is arranged for a photograph in Tokyo, Japan. (Photographer: Akio Kon/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- A quarter-century after its disastrous first foray into virtual reality, Nintendo Co. has returned to the technology with an affordable headset that has potential for bigger things.

The Labo VR Kit, which went on sale Friday and starts at $40, is a build-it-yourself set of cardboard goggles and controllers for Nintendo’s Switch console. The VR system has been carefully designed to work within the limits of the Switch’s processing power, and to minimize the chances of making players dizzy or sick. Its simplistic "mini-games" seem aimed primarily at casual gamers, particularly parents with youngish kids, who might want to try VR without dropping the many hundreds of dollars that more advanced systems like Facebook Inc.’s Oculus Rift can cost.

Nintendo Returns to VR With $40 Headset 

If the VR kit sells, it could help enhance Nintendo’s games lineup without the company having to produce a bunch of new hits. Last week’s announcement that popular games Super Mario Odyssey and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild will be compatible with the cardboard headset generated more buzz than the headset’s original unveiling and pushed shares to a two-month high.

“Labo VR’s killer apps are certainly Mario Odyssey and Zelda,” said Serkan Toto, founder of Tokyo-based consultancy Kantan Games Inc. “If Labo VR sells, Nintendo will follow up with more content, first and foremost support for Mario Kart.”

A $40 version of the Labo kit comes with the basic goggles and a gun-like controller used to blast aliens. The full $80 version adds more controllers that resemble a camera, an elephant trunk, a bird and a pedal and are used in other mini-games to take photos of fish, fly like a bird, or paint in 3D. Another mode tests players’ creativity by letting them devise their own basic games.

So far, the software lacks the depth of Nintendo’s flagship titles and feels similar to the quirky mini-games released for other Labo products, which have mostly failed to attract a wide audience. The headset also makes painfully obvious the graphical limits of the Switch, which sports just half the pixel density of today’s top smartphones and a third the pixels of high-end VR headsets. The result: jagged 3D models and a noticeably low frame rate.

But Nintendo knows the Switch isn’t the ideal VR hardware. That’s why each mini-game in the Labo VR Kit is designed to be played at most for 5 to 10 minutes. The company has also opted against including a headset strap, meaning players are forced to hold the goggles up to their eyes. That also helps discourage using the system in anything other than short bursts, and encourages friends to pass it around.

Nintendo’s return to VR comes as a surprise after years of executives dismissing the technology as difficult to design games for or questionably safe. "When I see people play virtual reality, it makes me worry," legendary game designer and senior executive Shigeru Miyamoto told Time two years ago.

Nintendo Returns to VR With $40 Headset 

The company had reason to be skeptical. The Virtual Boy, its disastrous first attempt at a VR headset, flopped with gamers in 1995 due to lousy graphics, boring games, risks of nausea, and even worries over brain damage. Nintendo experimented with another VR product for its GameCube console a decade later, but ultimately shelved it.

That baggage is one reason why Nintendo has opted for a low-key approach with its new VR kit, foregoing a big launch event on Friday. A few retailers contacted in Tokyo said sales were trickling in, but lacked the lines that tend to accompany major debuts. Reviews of the device were mostly positive, but muted.

“For veterans of virtual reality, the full Labo VR Kit offers few of the jaw-dropping moments they’re accustomed to,” Eurogamer wrote in its review. “It’s not virtual reality as you’ve come to know it — and that’s what makes it so interesting,” wrote The Verge.

The biggest test will come in two weeks time, when the Mario and Zelda games will be updated for compatibility with the VR Kit. If Nintendo can succeed in adapting those hits for VR, it instantly gives the company one of the strongest software lineups of any VR headset. Beyond Mario Kart, other titles that are well suited for VR include the latest entries in the Star Fox and Mario Party series.

And by getting consumers immersed with its beloved characters in VR, Nintendo also takes another step in its bigger strategy of milking more value out of its intellectual property. As with the game maker’s upcoming theme parks and movies, VR can help diversify its returns on the likes of Pikachu and Donkey Kong.

“This is an experiment that shows Nintendo in 2019 still tries to innovate,” said Toto.

To contact the reporter on this story: Yuji Nakamura in Tokyo at ynakamura56@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Edwin Chan at echan273@bloomberg.net, Jeff Muskus

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.