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Old 04-01-24, 07:13 PM   #345
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Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: the mental asylum named Germany
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mapuc View Post
Have a few questions

1. You have on several occasions mentioned 100W powerbank
Question: Do you have some kind of fixing to fasten it to the headset ?

2. Do you have to swing the golf club hard, as you mentioned in another game thread ?

I have a room where I can play golf. It's my kitchen where I have 2X2 square meter free space.

Markus
The powerbank is not strapped to the headset. I use a 1m wire to connect headset with powerbank, I carry the latter in a belt pouch on my hip (if I use it, whcih is not always the case). If I sit, I place the battery loosely beside me on the couch or table, again with the wire. I linked to the items I use, at Amazon, in an earlier post.



The Golf club attachement I now use, is 55cm long. - The playing area I move around inside, is around 2.50x2.30, if need be one axis could be "extended" by 1m if I play table tennis for example and must jump to the left and right, far away fromm the table, to save a ball; one corner of that normal playing area however is covered by one edge of my bed, at knee height. But I swing above it, dont touch it. I play Tennis and Squash games with a racket attachment that "extents " my right arm by around 13cm. So, in my space, I have no problems. If your 2x2 meters however are solid walls or furniture, then - I would get something shorter than my Golf club attachment. Or play with just controllers.



I also mark the center of my playing area with a hand-sized round tile that I place on the carpet. I can feel it with my foot and then know that I'm "safe" and can stretch my arms out in all directions and swing my bat attacks without breaking anything. I don't use the mask's virtual guardian system.



The Golf club I use is designed to mimic the weight distribution and feeling of mass when swinging a real golf club. And yes, I swing it with all my power, thats why I have sometimes muscle problems currently, I am still not used to it. To copy the grip and holding of a real golf club allows you to exactly use the same grip, stand and swing movement of your whole body. That is needed to get realistic reach and precision.


My club weighs around 530 gr with controller attached, but it is shorter than a golf club. I read the maximum weight for heavy golf clubs is around 480gr for the biog things, the shorter irons obviously are lighter. The higher weight at the tip is needed to bring the shorter attachement club to same club head speed when swinging like swinging a real, long golf club. I can take off a 70gr weight, however, and then additionally can tailor it further in 10gr intervals to vary weight in another 90gr range, so with controller attached I could make that club as light as 370gr. But you loose stability in swinging, and thus precision in that way. It becomes more "gamey".



There are severla companies, all from the US it seems, who produce good attachmentes made of good, solid materials (stay away fom plastioc stuff from asia). Some of these are lighter, and shorter than mine. Mine already is the shortened version of the default model, which is I think around one hand's width longer. I would have preferred that, but saw possible conflict with my spacing at home.



And yes you have to swing that golf club with all your power. However, you can cheat in the callibration where the computer measures your swing three times, and then adds virtual power to it to give you, with the power you invested, the range for every iron that it should have according to the table. Swing with 50% of the power of Tiger Woods, but get the range of his shots nevertehless, so to speak. Experts will want to tune the software to mimic the ranges they get with every club in real life. My power supplementation is 7% for driver and then goes down to 4% with the shortest iron, the lob wedge. This way I can reach the beginning of the fairway from back tee even on holes where the fairway is critically far away from the tees, and if the gap between both could be a sand or water obstacle, then, well, then this sucks. With at least a clean shot I can bridge at least these long distance traps, since else they could turn into showstoppers. The game says the driver has a range of 279m, without any callibration I can drive the ball from Tee just 180-210m, by my own power. With the way I tweaked it, I can get up to 220, 230m in flight, and then some more rolling. I wnat it "realiostic. I am not Tiger Woods or Arnold Palmer, you know, just a newbie trying to survive out there on the fairway. The simulation aspect is priority for me, not to pretend I am some pro player that I am certainly not.



You can test Golf+ first with the default controller, then you see how you move around in your flat and how much "space reserve" you have, but 2mx2m is sharp, really. I known however that there are players doing it with that, and I did it myself too, with the Rift and on cable headset. Other games benefit from the passthrough mode: mixed reality. I play table tennis with the table set up in the wall and on the balcony of my room, I see the surroundings in real, just with the overlay of the table, or my boxing opponent. Other sports game often use "portals through which the virtual reality of the game gets displayed, the portal itself however is placed and treated like an item of our real world, a screen. That works very well, you have seen it in videos I posted. Golf however does not have that.



I would not have the space to place a billoard table in my living room. But now I do, I place it on top of my existing furniture.



You just have to try and then see if you can figure it out, Markus. Just again and again sitting on your head and forming thoughts why it maybe could not work will get you nowhere. Get one set, test it, see what it does for you and how you react to it, and if you dont like it, give it back, via Amazon no problem (14 days). And there is much more good stuff for a VR headset than just golf. Cinemas, for example.
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