HTC’s New ‘Link’ Mobile VR Headset is (bizarrely) Not Part of the Vive Brand

In a curious move, HTC has revealed a new mobile VR headset called Link that is not part of the company’s Vive brand. The move comes just a week after the company announced a mobile standalone Vive headset in partnership with Google.

HTC is by now one of the world’s leaders in the virtual reality space. The company actually set up the HTC Vive Tech Corporation subsidiary back in 2015 under which all of its virtual reality activities have been coordinated. So it comes as a surprise to see the announcement of a new mobile headset that has nothing to do with the Vive brand, the company confirmed to Road to VR, despite the device’s logo which forms a shape very similar to the Vive logo.

The HTC Link headset is powered by its U11 smartphone and uses an external camera to track markers on the headset and controllers for positional tracking | Photo courtesy HTC

Instead the Link headset is designed to work with HTC’s newly announced U11 smartphone. It will also make use of an outside-in tracking system to support positional (6DOF) tracking; it’s one of the first mobile headsets coming from a major company to do so. Curious still, the Link headset is only due to be released in Japan, HTC tells Road to VR.

The Link announcement comes just one week after Google announced that it’s working with Vive (among others) to build new mobile standalone Daydream headsets for high-quality VR experiences built on Android. Meanwhile HTC itself has yet to offer a Daydream ready phone that would work with Google’s Daydream View headset.

The bulbous top portion atop the headset lights up to function as an optically tracked marker, similar to the glowing markers on PSVR and PlayStation Move | Photo courtesy HTC

The HTC phone group’s announcement of the Link and its lack of participation in Google’s Daydream initiative seems to reveal distinct operational boundaries of the company’s smartphone business and its Vive subsidiary. Despite Vive being one bright spot in a company that’s otherwise been attempting to claw its way back from major losses in the last several years, the brand is paid little attention on HTC’s main homepage, save for a header link that sends you off to the Vive website. Conversely, the only mention of the official HTC site on the Vive front page is reserved for a footer link.

To draw an analogy, this move would be much like if Facebook released it’s own branded VR headset that had nothing to do with Oculus.

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Vive is one of the most recognized and well regarded VR brands in the world today; to not leverage that brand as part of the launch of a new mobile VR headset—one which seems at odds with the strategies of the Vive brand—comes off as a strange misstep and a surprising lack of cross-pollination between two parts of the same company.

The post HTC’s New ‘Link’ Mobile VR Headset is (bizarrely) Not Part of the Vive Brand appeared first on Road to VR.

HTC U11 to get its own Headset called Link

It seems as if having one virtual reality (VR) head-mounted display (HMD) on the market isn’t enough for HTC, with the recent reveal of a standalone headset being made in partnership with Google. Today, the company has unveiled another, the HTC Link, a mobile headset its marketing alongside flagship smartphone, the U11.

In a Japanese press release, spotted by MoguraVR, the HTC Link looks to be completely separate from the HTC Vive branding that’s synonymous with the company’s VR business. The HMD is set to feature six degrees-of-freedom (6DoF) tracking through a bundled camera, and it’ll include two controllers that seem to be a mashup of HTC Vive’s controllers with PlayStation VR’s Move controllers, as there’s an illuminated orb on top.

HTC Link main

Another feature that separates the HTC Link from competitors like Samsung Gear VR and Google Daydream is that while it maybe powered by a smartphone it doesn’t use the screen. Instead the HMD has two 3.6 inch screens, with 1080 x 1200 pixels each and a 90 Hz refresh rate. Additionally, the headset also seems to have its own 2,800 mAh battery, which might avoid the U11 overheating, stopping gameplay.

To promote the headset in Japan HTC has partnered with the creators of Ghost in the Shell, using Ghost in the Shell ARISE artwork alongside the HTC U11 and HTC Link.

The HTC Link looks to be a Japan focused product that’s launching today through the country’s mobile carriers. For further updates on HTC’s VR plans keep reading VRFocus.

HTC LINK product spec
Head Mound Display Size Approximately 197.69 mm (width) x 116.61 mm (height) x 167.33 mm (depth)
Head mounted display weight 554 g (provisional value) * USB (Type-C) Including Y cable
Viewing angle About 110 degrees
Head mounted display battery About 2,800 mAh
display Approximately 3.6 inches Amored X 2
(1080 x 1200 pixels each, 90 Hz refresh rate)
External connection USB (Type-C) Y cable, 3.5 mm audio jack
Bundled items Stereo camera One
6DoF controller Two
LED Marker for HMD One
Strap for controller Two
Alkaline AAA battery 4
earphone One
Compatible models HTC U 11