This Week In VR Sports: World Cup Developments And ESports Matches

As the events of the World Cup continue it is time for another entry of This Week In VR Sport. Every week VRFocus brings you a number of sports and eSports related virtual reality (VR) and augmented reality (AR) stories. Keeping to the theme of the beautiful game there are two stories on the World Cup this week including download numbers for the BBC World Cup VR App and a VR penalty kick experience. Elsewhere, the Onward Invitational eSports event has been continuing and a number of matches are now available to watch including one with the developers.

BBC World Cup VR App Downloaded Over 325K Times

BBC VR World Cup 2018

Getting to the topic of the FIFA World Cup 2018 right away, it has been revealed that the BBC World Cup VR app has been downloaded over 325,000 times. The app allows views to enjoy a wide range of content from the event in immersive VR and put themselves closer to the sport then ever before. The number of downloads, though tiny in comparison to non-VR viewing of the World Cup is still an impressive number on its own. It shows that there is a growing audience for the media even if there is still a long way to go.

All of the 33 World Cup games from the BBC, including the final, are to be available via the BBC Sport VR 2018 FIFA World Cup app. According to the figures, as reported by Broadcast, non-VR viewings of the World Cup have passed more than 40 million live and on-demand request for the BBC’s coverage across BBC Sport and BBC iPlayer.

It will be interesting to see if the number of downloads for the VR app continue to grow as the World Cup continues or if we have already hit the peak. VRFocus will be sure to let you know should the BBC reveal more data.

Onward Invitational Matches Available To Watch

As VR videogames continue to become more common in the eSport’s scene the VR League and ESL have been putting select titles into the limelight. Recently, during the Onward Invitational, eSport team Stack Up went head-to-head against the Onward development team, Downpour Interactive in a heated multiplayer match. Since it’s airing the whole match is available to watch YouTube and can be seen just above.

The other matches from the Onward Invitational are becoming avaiable to watch on the same YouTube channel as well with a number already up at the time of writing. This includes Mob Squad versus Globocherm,SMC Tactical versus Globochem and Mod Squad versus Beginners.

The Onward Invitational is ongoing so for all the latest from the VR League, keep reading VRFocus.

Test Your Penalty Shoot-Out Skills In New VR Experience

The Straits Times

Finally this week, another piece of World Cup goodness. If you have been thinking you could do a better job then some of the players when it comes to penalty kicks there is now a VR experience that will let you prove it. The Straits Times has created a lightweight VR penalty shoot-out challenge for fans of the World Cup and lets them pick from the 32 countries taking part and try to lead them to victory.

Needing to score the as many kicks as possible, players will start from the bottom and work their way up through the rounds until they are in the finals. As you progress so to do the other teams, with a performance comparison available at the end of the experience to see how they fared. The experience is designed for mobile devices but can also be enjoyed on a computer using a mouse. You can try it for yourself here.

That is all for This Week In VR Sport. For more on immersive sport news keep reading VRFocus and remember to check back next week for another This Week In VR Sport.

This Week in VR Sport: Kicks, Hoops and Gunshots

As the second weekend of March is here it is time for VRFocus to bring you another edition of This Week in VR Sport. This week there’s football tackling virtual reality (VR), the NBA looking to augmented reality (AR) and VR eSports takes another step towards competitive showdowns.

Virtual Reality Football Club Launched

VRFC Screenshot_024

Developer CherryPop Games released VR football title VRFC: Virtual Reality Football Club this week on PlayStation VR, Oculus Rift and HTC Vive. The title allows players to live out their dreams of playing the beautiful game in VR with all the movement you would expect. Kick, dribble, tackle, pass, cross, head and shoot with freedom thanks to the K4 physics system and what the developers call ‘Agile locomotion’. All of this playable with up to eight players online, with cross-play compatible making VRFC: Virtual Reality Football Club as close to the real thing as you would hope.

VRFocus’ editor Kevin Joyce reviewed VRFC: Virtual Reality Football Club saying: “While the videogame has many issues deriving from the limitations of the hardware upon which it is built, VRFC: Virtual Reality Football Club remains one of the best sports experiences VR has to offer. More than that however, it’s also one of the best social VR experiences currently available, with the tension of competition and the misery of defeat likely to help make new friends (and potentially enemies) across the VR community.”

You can read the full review here.

Boston Celtics Co-Owner Talks AR Use In Team App

BostonCeltics App

The Boston Celtics co-owner Wyc Grousbeck has spoken about the use of AR technology in the future of the teams’ app. Speaking at the 2018 MIT Sloan Sports Analytics Conference the co-owner said: “We are building it into our Celtics’ app, we are going to have it at our games to enhance, for the second-screen viewing, even when you’re in the seats, with stats and data. We’re working on that and we’re not rolling it out yet.” 

The National Basketball Association (NBA) is one of the professional sports leagues that has been quick to pick up on new technologies, allowing for more engagement between the viewer and the sport. By bringing AR into the team app Boston Celtics will do just that, as Grousbeck described, creating a second screen experience. The NBA have made use of AR before in the form of the NBA AR mobile app that allows users to turn their smart phone or tablet into a hoop scoring videogame, thanks to Apple’s ARKit technology.

Grousbeck added: “I’m a believer in AR, I think it’s going to add a lot, but I still love sort of the old-school being in the seat, or sort of being right there and just soaking it all in. But augmenting that in an appropriate way can add something to it. I’m sure it will be a bigger part of our future.”

Seeing how the Boston Celtics make use of the technology within their team app will be interesting to see but with co-owner Wyc Grousbeck at the helm, it sounds promising.

VRcade PowerPlay Makes VR ESports Competitive

VRcade Arena image2

Lastly this week is news that VRstudios have announced the latest in VR eSports technology in the form of VRcade PowerPlay. This new location-based entertainment (LBE) solution mixes free-roaming, arena scale VR wih athletic, team-based eSports is designed for two to eight players allowing for unrestricted movement in a 60’x40′ configurable VRcade PowerPlay Battlefield.

The VRcade PowerPlay is another step forward for the VR eSports scene as it continues to grow. Speaking about the announcement, Kevin Vitale, VRstudios’ CEO said: “Everyone recognises that eSports are increasingly popular and we believe that the release of VRcade PowerPlay is literally a ‘game-changer’. It’s the next generation of eSports that adds true athletic activity over a large format playing field, and it can be deployed by any LBE operator.” “While complementary to our other systems and attractions, VRcade PowerPlay creates a whole new category of location-based VR entertainment for both players and spectators. It also opens the door to a number of new business models and branding options going forward for LBE operators and sponsors.”

Another week, another set of exciting developments in the world of VR sports. For more on immersive sport news keep reading VRFocus and remember to check back next week for another This Week In VR Sport.

This Week In VR Sport: It’s a Football Start to March

For the first weekend of March VRFocus brings you another edition of This Week In VR Sport. With new technology being used to provide viewers with virtual reality (VR) highlights and augmented reality (AR) statistics, Real Madrid are creating VR content and a new VR solution to practicing football drills. This Week In VR Sport is all about the beautiful game.

La Liga Bringing 360 VR and AR to Football Matches

Spain’s professional football league, La Liga, have set up a partnership with Intel to allow fans to have access to more content then ever before. This includes 360-degree replays and AR statistics all thanks to the new technology that is being brought into stadiums. Thanks to 38 cameras placed around the outside of a stadium and using software to stitch the series of videos together, this results in a multi-angle view of highlights that viewers can explore at their own pace. This is further enhanced thanks to the SkyCam which hangs directly above the pitch and is also brought into the content available to viewers.

La Liga logo

 

Viewers will also be able to take advantage of what La Liga is calling the ‘Laser Wall’ which is a graphic overlay for statistics and even draws lines to help explain key moments during a match. The technology is also hoping to help reduce any controversies and/or conflicts that may occur by providing even more viewpoints for replays to be reviewed. La Liga is also considering releasing post-match content that would allow viewers to explore a matches highlights in their preferred angle, rather then watching what is delivered by the TV production team. On top of all this there are continued developments in the VR area to allow viewers a virtual room experience, in which they can watch a match, view details and become fully immersed in the moment.

Real Madrid Launch VR Channel

Continuing the news of Spanish football, Real Madrid have launched their own 360 degree and VR channel as part of The Dream VR app platform. The club plans to release monthly content on the channel, offering fans “a first-hand insight into the Real Madrid experience, which to date has been available to very limited number of fans.”

Real Madrid 360

The Dream VR app is one of the largest VR networks with over two million downloads across 180 countries. Real Madrid will be the first football club to release content onto the app and have their own VR channel. As more football clubs continue to explore the possibility of VR content and with Real Madrid taking the step forward, it is highly likely that more clubs will follow soon and begin creating their own channels.

The Dream VR app is available to download now on mobile device (iOS and Android) and smart televisions as well a number of VR platforms including Google Daydream, Oculus Rift, Samsung Gear and HTC Vive.

Mi-Hiepa Sports Might Be The Future of Football Drills

Mi Hiepa was announced a few months back but has recently been showing off what it can do for players at the Mobile World Congress show in Barcelona. Designed to allow coaches, managers, scouts and sports directors a rapid, standardised and measurable solution to train and review their talent pools. By taking advantage of VR technology the program allows both new and existing players to train in a number of live drills and track their results and progress all within virtual space. This is done thanks to the HTC Vive Pro and tracking units which allows for pinpoint accuracy in the tracking to ensure that players have a lifelike, full-body experience within the virtual space.

Not just aimed at finding new talent though, the solution is also designed to allow for cognitive coaching, rehabilitation, performance reviews and skill training. You can see a demotion of Mi Hiepa in the below video.

For more on immersive sport news keep reading VRFocus and remember to check back next week for another This Week In VR Sport.

This Week in VR Sport: A Sporting Rivalry Broadcast Live & When 360 Degree Video Gets Awkward

Sometimes when it comes to writing our weekly feature on the various things occurring as the world of sport meets that of virtual reality (VR) – or indeed augmented reality (AR) for that matter –  there is only one or perhaps two stories.  However, this week we’re flush with four items to cover football, American football and more. So let’s get into those, shall we?

NextVR Bring ‘El Clásico’ To VR

We start with football, where for the majority of leagues it is the off-season, certainly those in Europe. It’s a time here managers and coaches make their plans for the season ahead but also a time where clubs engage in a variety of lucrative tours, playing in one-off exhibition games, fundraisers, as well as leagues and cups with other clubs from around the world.

NextVR have pounced on an opportunity with one of these tours which will see, today, the two biggest teams from Spain’s top flight, La Liga, battle it out. Those are of course the great footballing powerhouses Barcelona and Real Madrid. Eternal rivals, their matches long ago given the nickname ‘El Clásico’. For once it is the American audience who will get the opportunity to see the game take place at Miami’s Hard Rock Stadium. But you can too if you’ve got a Samsung Gear VR.

Head on over to the Oculus Store and subscribe to gain access to the ICC Channel in the NextVR app where you’ll be able to enjoy the broadcast either in Spanish or English.

Reading Welcome Their New Kit (Sort Of)

You may recall last week’s edition of This Week In VR Sport (if you see what I mean) where NBA side the Sacramento Kings unveiled what would be their their new Nike uniforms using an augmented reality (AR) app. Well, over in England Championship football club Reading have also been revealing their kit for the 2017-2018 season. But they’ve done so using 360 degree video.

Filmed in the dressing room, members of the squad got to see the kit they’ll be wearing next season for the first time whilst players Joey van den Berg and Liam Moore model play the somewhat reluctant models. Actually the whole thing is notable not for the announcement but just by how… off it feels. Like no one’s comfortable being filmed in this way.

Still, one for the footy fans and that orange away kit actually looks really nice.

AltSpaceVR’s Brazilian Swansong

Yesterday we brought you the sad news of the closure of VR social app AltSpaceVR. One of the early trail blazers in what could be possible in VR, the company revealed on Friday morning that owing to funding issues they could not “afford to keep the virtual lights on anymore”.

Quite the shame because at the end of last week AltSpaceVR had one of their most mainstream media appearances – and it had to do with sport.

As reported by SVG News, AltSpaceVR and LX Sports Group announced a new partnership with top sports broadcaster ESPN Brazil. Hosting the virtual programme ESPN & Cairo Santos in VR, Santos being a Brazilian player for the Kansas City Chiefs. In the programme ESPN used AltSpaceVR, for its intended purpose – a social platform where people can meet others from all over the world.  Producing an interview with what was essentially a live audience from around the world.

Erica Booze, the CEO of LX Sports Group said on the initial announcement: “Shortening the distance between an athlete and their fans through technology has motivated us to broker this unique experience for sports fans. By uniting the visibility of ESPN with AltspaceVR technology, we expect an excellent experience in both Brazil and the United States.”

ESPN Brazil’s VP of Journalism and Production João Palomino added, “ESPN wants to bring sports fans into our studios, creating a unique kind of interaction and taking a step forward in offering multi-platform content. We are driven to innovate in ways that will allow us to serve our fans better.”

It will be interesting to see if ESPN will attempt similar broadcasts in the future with altenate services – perhaps Facebook’s Avatars system?

Stanford University’s Experiments Continue

Back to America now where the Stanford University’s sports department have been utilizing 360 degree video to bring students a new way of interacting with the various sports and athletics teams. Covering everything from American football to a very interesting video on fencing in which the viewer takes on someone one-on-one with additional effects, to wrestling. This is the latest use of VR by the university who have featured on VRFocus numerous times, including their work performing tests with the NFL, appearances at conventions to discuss the uses of VR, and investigating how VR can be used to combat phobias.

Faculty discuss their efforts at length in this piece by SportTechie where they  do note that people may be losing out on the experience, simply by not using a compatible VR head mounted display (HMD) to view the footage.

“This is a good example of the biggest problem with any VR that we’re producing or anyone else is producing — most people don’t watch it as it is intended.” Said Heath Trabue, Stanford Athletics’ Director of video services ruefully. “A very small percentage of folks are watching VR content on a headset. It’s going to be mostly on a phone or on not so good 4G. There are a lot of bad experiences with it in that sense.”

You can see the fencing video below.