I have major throwback memories to 2016 as I open up the limited-edition Meta Quest 3S Xbox Edition. This new VR bundle includes a black Quest 3S VR headset with Xbox green highlights, similarly colored Touch controllers and an Xbox controller, too. The original Oculus Rift headset I reviewed years ago also came with an Xbox controller inside, because back then Oculus didn’t even have its VR Touch controllers yet. It was also black, not white like the current Quest headsets. It’s funny how things come full circle.
This Xbox-branded Quest was announced over a year ago, but it took till now to show up. It is far from anything like PlayStation VR 2. Really, it’s just a Quest 3S in black with a few extra accessories thrown in.
For $400, the deal isn’t bad considering the included Meta Elite Strap and Xbox controllers run more than $100 total when bought separately. There’s a three-month Xbox Game Pass Ultimate trial code inside, too. But it’s hardly anything anyone would need, and it’s a little odd that the special bundle incorporates the lower-end 128GB capacity 3S instead of the better-visual-quality, larger-storage Quest 3.
The Quest headsets can stream Xbox GamePass games via cloud gaming in a Quest app, throwing 2D games on a bigger virtual screen in headset. That’s something you can already do on Quest headsets now; you don’t need this Xbox Quest for that. This is simply a limited-edition design drop, a little collector’s item.
But it also makes me wonder when (and if) Microsoft will start dipping its toes into VR and AR a bit more. Microsoft used to have its own VR hardware, and the HoloLens, and aspirations to be a key part of the XR landscape. (Also: Minecraft VR, RIP.) Times are different now, and this Xbox Quest is really just another flavor of Microsoft’s «This is an Xbox» marketing campaign that’s been pushing cloud gaming on tablets, TVs and everywhere else.
And yet, Microsoft is also extending some of its gaming interests. An Xbox-branded Asus Xbox ROG Ally handheld coming later this year is expected to finesse the ways Xbox games play on Windows handhelds, a stepping stone toward Microsoft figuring out how to evolve better hardware of its own eventually, perhaps. Maybe this Xbox Quest experiment is another toe in the water to gauge interest in other things, too.
For now, it’s just a fun way to get a black Quest 3S. But it’s also weird because the Quest 3S is not the best-quality Quest headset for visual fidelity. The Quest 3 has a better-resolution display and better lenses. And this is just the 128GB version of the Quest 3S, not the 256GB model. Xbox cloud streaming may not need more storage, but plenty of beefy Quest game downloads do. An Xbox Quest 3 would have made more sense to me, but it would have cost more than $400.
My suggestion? I think Meta should bring back the black VR headset color option to all of its headsets, because it looks really good.