Monday, March 25th 2019
Teslasuit, the Full Body Haptic Feedback VR Suit, Wins the Red Dot Design Award
If you've heard of Teslasuit, you've likely felt some sort of interest towards it. As well you should: the ideal of a full body suit with haptic feedback for VR experiences is enough for some of us - at least those with the hero, "I'll never get hit by any bullet" complex. Add to the full body haptic feedback capabilities such as full body motion tracking embedded into the suit, as well as localized temperature controls for transmitting heat and cold sensations, and... There's also biometric feedback built in for usage patterns and engagement ratio, to aid developers in their data collecting. Well, can I hear Ready Player One, anyone?
The company behind the Tesla suit have just announced that their product won the Red Dot: Best of the Best, the top distinction in the competition. It is granted for groundbreaking design and goes to the best products in a category. The Teslasuit is now available for distribution as a development kit, and features dedicated software, documentation, API integration with Unreal Engine, Unity, and Motion Builder.
Source:
Teslasuit
The company behind the Tesla suit have just announced that their product won the Red Dot: Best of the Best, the top distinction in the competition. It is granted for groundbreaking design and goes to the best products in a category. The Teslasuit is now available for distribution as a development kit, and features dedicated software, documentation, API integration with Unreal Engine, Unity, and Motion Builder.
27 Comments on Teslasuit, the Full Body Haptic Feedback VR Suit, Wins the Red Dot Design Award
So that suit may be a tight fit.
(credits to DarrenGeers at Deviantart)
(Disclaimer: Forum guidelines don't say if I'm allowed to post this, as far as I can tell, so I hope is not forbidden)
Uhm "check it out"...lol
I'm not surprised it seems like it was launched/demoed/tested/whatever in Japan, for some reason :laugh:
Tight cleavage - check
I'm actually surprised the fella in the pic doesn't sport a big bulge in crotch area, you know, just to satisfy everyone. "Maniac" on Netflix features a scene in which one character is caught using something exactly like this.
Sad.
If you google "wii injuries" you'll see it was a pretty popular topic a decade ago.
Photoshop is magical.