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PSVR 2 Review: The Best New VR Gaming Headset, If You Don’t Mind a Cord


Most people’s introduction to virtual reality has been in the form of a totally wireless headset called the Meta Quest 2. If you’ve been thinking about the future of self-contained VR goggles and the AR glasses that will likely follow in the next decade, Sony’s latest VR product may seem disappointing. Unlike the Quest, the PSVR 2 is a cabled VR headset that needs to be plugged into a PlayStation 5 to work.

You might not be so disappointed if you tried it, though. While the PSVR 2 does need to be tethered, it’s quite possibly the best luxury home VR experience that exists right now. 

Powered by vivid OLED displays, fantastic vibrating controllers with their own unique force-feedback triggers, and running on the high-powered graphics that the PlayStation 5 pumps out, this hardware can run laps around the Quest 2. And did I mention it works wonderfully with my super-chunky glasses?

Like

  • Vivid, high-res OLED display
  • Comfortable fit
  • Excellent controllers
  • Realistic vibrations
  • Powerful graphics potential

Don’t Like

  • Expensive
  • Needs to be cabled to PS5
  • Included earbuds are just OK
  • Doesn’t work with old PSVR games
  • Game library needs more exclusives

Seven years after the first PlayStation VR first arrived for the PlayStation 4, Sony has finally perfected plug-in console VR. But there are downsides, one of which is that the headset alone costs $550, on top of the $500 PS5 console. 

I first tried the PSVR 2 last fall and was impressed then. Now, after trying it at home for a week, I’m still impressed. For anyone who wants a ticket to what will likely be the best-looking VR games on the planet (unless you have a high-end gaming PC and expensive VR hardware), the PSVR 2 does for games what I had hoped the work-focused Quest Pro would have.

But, arriving early on in a year that looks full of VR headset competition (Vive XR Elite, the Quest 3
and Apple’s possible headset debut), this feels almost like a soft launch. 

There are plenty of games to play already, but few are exclusives — or even new. The real possibilities of the PSVR 2 still feel untapped, and my big unanswered question is how many original games Sony will unleash to make the most of its potential. And will a more affordable PS5-PSVR 2 bundle arrive at some point to make this more budget-friendly?

I don’t know. But I do know right now that the PSVR 2 is my favorite dedicated VR gaming hardware, even with its tethered cable and limited software. I still think the Quest 2 offers more value and freedom of movement for its price, but the PSVR 2 shows glimpses of how good the future could be. Playing games on the PSVR 2 doesn’t just feel like VR — it often feels like a PS5 game has leapt out and surrounded me. Unlike what I’m normally used to in standalone VR gaming, the best PSVR 2 games feel as detailed as PS5 games on my TV.

This is what comes inside the package. Controllers, headset, earbuds and an extra USB-C-to-A cable.


Scott Stein/CNET

Inside the box: What the first PSVR should have been

The contents of the PlayStation VR 2 may not surprise anyone who’s bought a VR headset recently, but it’s a big breath of fresh air for anyone who had the original 2016 PlayStation VR. Gone are the weird cables and breakout boxes; there’s just the headset with its long cable, a pair of Sense controllers, some earbuds and an USB C-to-A charge cable, also needed to initially sync the controllers to the PS5.

It’s amazing how easy the setup process is compared to the multicable project it was with the first PSVR. That USB-C cable permanently attached to the headset is your one-cord ticket into Sony’s VR worlds, and you just need to plug it in (and get set up with room boundaries and eye tracking, more on that below). The controllers charge up using USB-C or an optional, sold-separately charging dock. 

You can check out our unboxing hands-on thoughts, but it’s all good news for someone who doesn’t want this to feel intimidating to install.


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The headset: Refined, glasses-friendly, not perfect 

Yes, there’s a long cable attached to the PSVR 2 headset. It’s part of life in this headset, and I wish it were wireless. That being said, the cable is pretty long (4.5 meters, or 14.7 feet), which should cover most rooms. The original PSVR had a similar-length cable. It emerges from the side of the headset, and sometimes I found it dangling weirdly to my side, or tangling around me as I turned several times in some games like Horizon: Call of the Mountain. Cabled VR has its downsides; I worried I’d maybe run my office chair over it or damage it somehow. It means you can’t use PSVR 2 in any room other than the one your PlayStation 5 is set up in. I’ve been spoiled by wireless VR.

The headset tightens to your head with a single knob, similarly to the original PSVR, while the front visor slides in and out to meet your eyes. The eyepiece is wide and the rubber gasket around it is too, and it fits fine over the same super-wide glasses that don’t even fit into the Quest 2. This might be the best glasses-friendly VR headset on the market. That being said, my glasses lenses sometimes bumped against the PSVR 2 lenses when I tightened the headset, so be careful.

Two VR headsets facing each other on a wooden table

The PSVR 2 (left) next to the original PSVR (right). Same design concept, but a big improvement this time around.


Scott Stein/CNET

The OLED HDR displays are pretty great, too. The 2,000×2,040-per-eye resolution feels sharp, although not quite “retina-level” resolution like you’d get on a 4K TV or your phone. Meaning that I can still make out a bit of pixelation. That being said, it’s vivid, detailed and bright, with a 110-degree viewing area that’s larger than the Quest 2. I do, however, sense a bit of blur or bleed when I move my head at high speeds, a bit more than I’ve noticed on the Quest 2 or Quest Pro.

The audio’s less impressive, at least with the included earbuds. A pair of plastic buds on a plastic bracket pop into the headset’s rear strap and dangle down. The PSVR 2 doesn’t have off-ear ambient audio like the Quest 2 and other headsets often do. Putting in the buds means isolated sound, but you won’t be able to hear others around you (something I often need when playing around kids to make sure I’m not ignoring them). The 3D audio sounded just OK to me, but you can plug in your own headphones. The headset also works with Sony’s over-ear Pulse 3D wireless headphones, which sound much better — but they also made my face sweat more. (The Pulse USB adapter slots into one of the PS5’s USB-A ports, while the PSVR 2 goes into the front USB-C port.) Weirdly, the headband has its own earbud storage of a sort: You pop the buds into weird, little grippy cut-out holes. It feels like I might damage the buds when I pull them back out, though, or leave some ear gunk in there. It feels like a pretty inelegant audio solution for a high-end headset.

The PSVR 2 also has two features you won’t easily find anywhere else.

Built-in headset vibration kicks in with some games, feeling like a rumble for your face. It sounds crazy, but it adds a basslike kick in cinematic experiences, and feedback that works with the controller haptics to make environments feel even more immersive.

The PlayStation VR 2 headset and controllers seen from above on a wooden table.

A look at the hardware from above. Lens distance is controlled by a dial, and the headset can be adjusted in and out with the other side button. Note that the earbuds slot into little holders on the headband — kind of weird.


Scott Stein/CNET

There’s also eye tracking, a feature likely coming to a lot more VR headsets. The Meta Quest Pro has eye tracking but doesn’t use it much in its early apps and games. Sony uses the feature a lot more. PSVR 2 games use a technology called foveated rendering that optimizes graphics quality only where it senses your eyes are looking directly, which can boost graphics without you noticing the missing detail around the edges. Some games also use eye tracking for experimental controls. In Horizon: Call of the Mountain you can navigate menus and aim with your eyes, and games like Tentacular and Rez Infinite use it, too. 

I’ve had problems having eye tracking work with my thick glasses in VR before, and it took a few tries to set up the PSVR 2 for it to finally work. (Tip for glasses-wearers: Make sure the headset’s moved close enough to your glasses.).

Two PlayStation VR headsets on a wood table, turned so we can see the lenses on each

The PlayStation VR2 (left) next to the original PlayStation VR (right) — a similar headband-type visor fit for each, with improved lenses and design on the PSVR 2.


Scott Stein/CNET

The headset is reasonably adjustable, too. Besides sliding in closer or farther from your face, there’s also a dial to adjust the distance between lenses (called IPD, or interpupillary distance) to fit different eyes. Sony’s setup software makes adjusting the fit pretty easy.

The headset controls aren’t easy to access with a headset on, though. A recessed power button at the bottom of the headset is hard to fumble for, and a button triggering the passthrough cameras to see around you is less easy to find than, say, double-tapping on the side of the Quest 2.

That said, the black-and-white passthrough cameras offer sharper detail than the Quest 2 cameras do, although they aren’t in color like the Quest Pro.

Easy to set up

Setup and functions feel very similar to the Oculus Quest. Four built-in cameras on the headset handle all the room tracking, so you don’t need a camera mounted on your TV like with the older PSVR hardware. The new controllers can track movement in space and also have all the buttons, analog sticks and triggers that other VR controllers enjoy. The PSVR 2 scans your room, meshing out a play area by painting your walls and obstacles with polygons, similar to AR headsets I’ve tried like the Magic Leap. It ends up suggesting a play area based on that, but you can adjust the drawn boundary to your liking. It’s a nicer process than the Quest.


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Setting Up the PlayStation VR2



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The PSVR 2 recommends a 6.7-by-6.7-foot play area for full movement, but that’s a lot of space. My office has around five feet by four feet, and it was fine. Much like other VR headsets, when you come to the edges of your play boundary, glowing grid-walls warn you and can sometimes interrupt the flow of gameplay a bit.

Sony PSVR 2 headset on a wood table

Josh Goldman/CNET

The controllers: Pretty stellar

Sony never had a true dedicated game controller for VR before — the original PSVR made you use the terrible old PlayStation Move wands. The Sense controllers are a long-awaited upgrade, and they’re all you’d expect them to be.

The Sense controllers feel a little more sleek than the Quest 2 Touch controllers, as if they’re part spaceship. The spherical orb feel is more prominent, and the button-stick layout is more gentle and curved. They’re light, too. The buttons and sticks are smaller than the DualSense controller’s but feel just as good. Equally stellar are the triggers, which have the same force-feedback as the DualSense. Some games make you press harder to make a weapon fire, or when climbing a cliff. These controllers don’t have a D-pad, though, or the DualSense’s clickable touchpad; this means you’ll still need a DualSense to play non-VR PS5 games on the headset.

The haptics feel great, too. The ripples and rumbles are more nuanced than any other VR controller I’ve ever tried, and it makes a difference. In Tentacular, I felt like my wiggly tentacle-hands were jiggling. Star Wars: Tales From The Galaxy’s Edge finesses its various guns and tools to make it feel like they’re reverberating in my hand. In Horizon: Call of the Mountain, I can feel the tension of the bow and arrows I’m using.

PSVR 2 headset

The Sense controllers next to the DualSense PS5 controller. The analog sticks and buttons are smaller, but the vibrations and adaptive trigger tech have a similar feel.


Dan Ackerman/CNET

Battery life might be one downside. I’ve seen the controllers start to run low after a few hours of gaming, although they recharge quickly over USB-C or with Sony’s separately-sold charge dock, which costs $50 and was included in our review package. The charge dock comes with little contact pin dongles that slot into the controller’s USB-C slots so they can rest right on the dock to charge, allowing you to charge both controllers at once. Then again, you could also just plug them both into a standard charger instead.

Also, these controllers don’t have the same finger awareness that the Quest 2 controllers have. With the Quest 2, I can lift my fingers off-button, or rest them on top, and it makes my fingers move in VR. The PSVR 2 doesn’t pull off finger motions in the same nuanced way for all games, it seems, although some hand and finger tracking happens in games like Horizon: Call of the Mountain. Whether future updates improve this is unclear.

There are adjustable hand straps on both controllers that also snap off in case you want to skip them. I keep them on to be safe.

horizon: call of the mountain screenshot for psvr 2

Horizon: Call of the Mountain is the PSVR 2’s flagship exclusive at the moment, although Gran Turismo 7 and Resident Evil Village are also big draws.


Sony Interactive Entertainment

Games: A few standouts, many ports, no PSVR backward compatibility

I’ve played about 16 games so far of Sony’s PSVR 2 launch library, and they’re very good games, but many of them are familiar ports of stuff I’ve played on the Oculus Quest and other headsets for years. Some of these games, like Star Wars: Tales From The Galaxy’s Edge Enhanced Edition, Tentacular and Rez Infinite, have gotten graphics upgrades, or added more advanced haptics effects or optional eye-tracking controls. 

I’ve been most interested in Sony’s flagship exclusive, Horizon: Call of the Mountain. Set in the Horizon RPG game universe, it’s more of a linear adventure than a true RPG experience. But it’s a wonderful demo of the system’s power. The gameplay so far has been a mix of archery-based attacking (think In Death: Unchained) and climbing (think The Climb 2), with a bit of Half-Life Alyx thrown in. I’ve gotten stuck at a pretty tough boss battle, though, which brings up something I’ve noticed: The game controls aren’t always easy for me to use.

Some PSVR 2 games are VR-only. Others are PS5 games getting free PSVR 2 upgrades. Those games — notably No Man’s Sky, Gran Turismo 7 and Resident Evil Village — are ones I haven’t played yet. Access to the updates is hitting closer to PSVR 2 launch, so I’ll update this with my impressions when I can.

tentacular screenshot for PSVR 2

Games like Tentacular, already on other VR platforms, get a boost from the PSVR 2’s improved vibrational feedback.


Screenshot by Scott Stein/CNET

It’s a bummer that all the existing PSVR games from the last seven years aren’t automatically backward-compatible, though. Without an update, you can’t play them on PSVR 2 at all; blame this on the new hardware using different controllers and tracking technology, perhaps. Some games are getting free PSVR 2 updates, while others are charging extra for the new PSVR 2 version, but I hope more follow. There are tons of original PSVR exclusives (Super Stardust, Wipeout, Blood and Truth, Paper Beast) that are being left behind. It’s also a shame that original PSVR owners don’t get a reward for their commitment, and instead are being made to repurchase so many games. After all, the PS5 can play PS4 games. The PSVR 2 should have found a way to figure this out.

And where is Astro Bot? My favorite, wonderful Astro Bot, the magical mascot that Sony uses to guide players through strange new interfaces like… the first PSVR, or the PS5 at launch. Oddly, nowhere to be seen (yet, anyway). I could have used the little guy. Or, at least, some sort of more casual, beautiful way to enjoy PSVR 2 beyond Horizon’s intensity.

This existing library of launch games is strong but not good enough for the PSVR 2 to justify its price yet. By the end of 2023, hopefully, that will change.

The PSVR 2 and its controllers on a table

You could play regular 2D PS5 games on the PSVR 2, and watch movies and shows. It’s better with games, in my experience, but you’ll need your DualSense controller for that.


Scott Stein/CNET

Is this good enough to replace my TV?

Short answer: For me, no. But it’s getting oh so close. You totally could use this as your gaming display for the PS5 and just play everything in it. 2D games float on an adjustable size screen in front of your face. I played a bunch of Madden 23 on it. It works! It’s good! But still not great. I still find it a bit below the vivid ultracrisp detail I’d expect, but the gap is seriously closing. This is approaching “retina display” level, but still not quite there.


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Oddly missing: No metaverse ecosystem

Unlike VR headsets like the Quest 2, which have social apps, ways to create avatars and places to watch concerts and build worlds, the PSVR 2 surprisingly skips all of this at launch. It’s really just beautiful hardware to launch VR games. There’s no “home” space, and no social apps like VRChat or Rec Room are on PSVR 2 yet at the time this is being written. 

I’m sure some of that will change this year, but it makes the PSVR 2 feel less like a future-facing metaverse device and more like a hardware extension of the PS5. That might be good news for some people, since I find the Quest 2 has gotten a bit messy and overloaded with buggy features lately. Still, in a year where it looks like VR and AR devices are popping up everywhere, it can make the PSVR 2 seem a half-step behind.

A PSVR 2 headset next to the PlayStation 5 on a wooden table

The PSVR 2 needs a PS5. It’s cabled to it. But once you’ve set it up, you don’t need a TV.


Scott Stein/CNET

No mixed reality or hand tracking, either

Another thing the PSVR 2 doesn’t do yet is any sort of mixing of VR and the real world using its passthrough cameras. The Quest Pro and even the Quest 2 have this feature, and more headsets will make it pretty standard. The PSVR 2 can do mixed reality, clearly: In fact, it meshes the room you’re in to measure the space and paints the room boundaries into the real world. Sony could add games or experiences with this feature down the road, depending on whether it’s seen as useful. It wouldn’t surprise me.

However, the PSVR 2 also doesn’t currently support hand tracking without controllers, a feature I take for granted now on the Quest 2. Hand tracking isn’t always accurate, and it lacks the precision of controllers, but it can be a helpful, accessible alternative to controller-based play. I’d love to see PSVR 2 games, or even the PSVR 2 main menu interface, be able to support this in the future. 

Conclusion: A great piece of hardware, but one you might wait on

There are a lot of factors that suggest you could, and maybe should, wait on PSVR 2. The price is high; at $550, it’s more than the PS5 alone, so the $1,050 total cost for both components without any games at all makes this a crazy-expensive proposition compared to a Quest 2. The Quest 2 is several years old (and a new model of it is coming this year, too), but at $400 with a handful of free apps to explore (and wireless as well), it’s a far more appealing proposition for casual or social VR explorers.

Also, will the PSVR 2 game library continue to evolve and feel as marvelous as Sony’s PS5 games? It’s hard to tell so far, but with plenty of VR game developers hopping on board, it looks promising. You might want to wait it out.

Will Sony eventually bundle a PS5 and PSVR 2 together at a lower price? Who knows, but the fall shopping season is far away, and it’s always a possibility. 

Finally, consider that there are other VR headsets expected this year: the Quest 3, the Vive XR Elite, and Apple’s possible entry to the space. The PSVR 2 won’t be the only one. But, with the PS5 as its engine, it feels like the best doorway to PC quality VR games without needing a PC at all.

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