Virtual Desktop is a long running PC streaming solution for VR headsets that stretches all the way back to the birth of Oculus. It's one of the oldest VR apps around in the modern age of VR, and has been one of the most consistently popular. The last version of Virtual Desktop, released for the Quest, included a "VR Streaming" mode:
VR Streaming mode lets you stream PC VR games from your PC to the Oculus Quest, so that the Quest can play PC VR games from Steam VR or the Desktop Rift client. There are other solutions to do this as well, but Virtual Desktop is probably the biggest, most popular entity to have such a feature these days. Today, apparently, Oculus dropped the hammer:
This is but the latest in a string of very draconian standards Oculus has been forcing upon developers since the release of CV1, way back when they tried to block ReVive. This type of practice honestly sucks.
VR Streaming mode lets you stream PC VR games from your PC to the Oculus Quest, so that the Quest can play PC VR games from Steam VR or the Desktop Rift client. There are other solutions to do this as well, but Virtual Desktop is probably the biggest, most popular entity to have such a feature these days. Today, apparently, Oculus dropped the hammer:
This is but the latest in a string of very draconian standards Oculus has been forcing upon developers since the release of CV1, way back when they tried to block ReVive. This type of practice honestly sucks.