Styly Is An Ambitious VR/AR Creation Platform You Can Try Now

At its busiest times, Tokyo’s iconic Shibuya crossing can see over 1,000 shoppers, business people and tourists scramble over the road. The lights go green and the tarmac morphs into a frenzy of hurried walkers and starry-eyed marvellers. From afar, it’s one of the city’s most captivating sights.

Inside Styly, though, it becomes the world’s biggest rave.

via GIPHY

By scanning a nearby QR code on Styly’s free new mobile AR app, you can project an almost painful strobe lighting show on the scramble. Set against the backdrop of this bustling sea of people it projects a little extra fun on a location already so well-known to millions of people.

It’s just one in a dizzying array of experiences I’m shown made through the Styly platform across two days in Tokyo. Creator Psychic VR Lab is one of those companies that is incredibly bullish about the future of VR and AR. CEO Masahiro Yamaguchi at one point tells me he thinks everyone will be wearing a headset all day in the near future, and there’s little sign of bluffing. Psychic VR is prepared to try a lot of different things in an attempt to hold a stake in that hopeful horizon.

But what exactly is Psychic VR Lab? A month ago I hadn’t heard of them, and I’d bet you hadn’t either. Do a little digging and you’ll discover an outfit very reminiscent of a Silicon Valley startup; a seemingly generous amount of investment from a renowned Japanese investor keeps the lights on at an eccentric Shinjuku-based office, smothered in a leafy overgrown texture quite polarizing to anything else on the street. A video shown by the group conveyed an eclectic 2017 opening party including, among other things, intimate theatrical acts and demon-dressed DJs that, altogether, seemed not unlike a New Year’s Eve house party in Portland.

As if it didn’t already sound crazy enough, Yamaguchi also showed me a clothing line of futurist-styled coats and cloaks he envisioned people wearing to make their HoloLens and Magic Leaps look like fashion accessories. In fact, he wore one of them over the course of the entire two days and then handed me one at the end, too. Perhaps if we changed the way we look everyday, he suggested, we might not be so embarrassed about these clunky headsets intended for everyday use.

Suffice to say Psychic VR is on the wilder side of VR/AR believers. Everything they are doing starts with Styly, a web-based creation platform for VR and AR headsets (AR distribution is coming soon). Right now with a free account you can launch Styly Studio and very quickly create a primitive virtual scene to view either in a browser or a VR headset. A library of user and developer-created assets and the ability to add in YouTube videos and images makes it simple to make a VR experience, however janky, in a few moments. For example, I made this trippy Pokemon zoo in about 10 minutes. It is woeful but, you know, I made it (sometimes these things take a while to load, so bear with it).

With a more deft understanding of the platform, Styly’s developers created some simple interaction-based scenes like this rudimentary baseball game.

Like many other immersive tech companies with dreams for the future, though, Styly is also making its move into AR. Early implementations can already be seen across Shibuya, from the crossing all the way up to a brash new shopping center, opened mere weeks ago. Outside this towering building, you can explore a photogrammetric capture of an old Akira art exhibit that used to surround the site during construction. Inside, an intriguing hybrid VR/AR experience, shown through a Daydream Mirage Solo headset, offers a virtual gallery between the center’s escalators.

Later on, I’m dazzled by an office display in which Psychic pulls more AR/VR wizardry, including one incredible experience in which I explore a diorama-sized real-world location before it is scaled up to place me right inside of it. More traditional AR exhibits on a HoloLens include virtual information panels appearing next to products on a shelf. Granted these are developer-made instances of the types of experiences long-envisioned by others, but the promise of handing these tools off for anyone to create is a potent one.

The question is when, or more importantly if, all of this gains any traction. Styly’s SteamVR app has been available for over two years and hasn’t garnered much attention. The company touts that it had over 10,000 uploads to its platform, but with no curation on publishing many of these could be simply abandoned drafts. You’ll have to dig to find any diamonds in its rough online library (though the recommendations page is a good place to start).

But there are some creators making a case for the platform. The company’s New View Awards selected the best Styly-made experiences over the past year with the 25 finalists covering the spectrum from bewilderingly messy to genuinely impactful VR experiences. One excellent manga VR piece teased the potential future of VR comics, for example, while another used photogrammetry to immortalize memories of traveling. Of particular note was this year’s grand prize winner, Takkun Museum, in which a father brought the vibrant, endearingly scribbled creations of his son to life in a spectacular theatrical performance.

There is enough here for me to envision a path to validity for Styly. These are, of course, all different strands of VR and AR experiences that we’ve seen before. While a long way from something like Unity, their aim is to appeal to a new generation of creators with an accessible toolset. It’s an ambitious goal, and this isn’t the only horse in that race. At present it’s tough to call if the wide net Psychic VR is casting will spread Styly too thin to catch any one specific developer audience, or if its jack of all trades approach will find traction while it slowly catches up to mastering each one (Styly Studio is still very much an expanding platform).

The company’s long-term plans eventually include taking a share of sold experiences, among other strategies. We’ll keep an eye on it in the future to see if it gains any traction.

Disclosure: UploadVR was a media partner for the New View Awards and Psychic VR covered accommodation and food for the two-day visit.

The post Styly Is An Ambitious VR/AR Creation Platform You Can Try Now appeared first on UploadVR.

25 New Creative VR Projects Up For 2019 New View Awards

A total of 25 new web-based VR projects have been lined up for next week’s New View Awards in Tokyo, Japan.

The New View Awards highlight VR experiences focused around fashion, culture and art, showcasing projects created on web-based development and publishing platform, Styly, developed by Psychic VR Lab.

You can check out some of the finalists now just through your browser, and there are some really interesting picks from developers all over the globe. We particularly like this unique take on Japanese manga, which has you navigating a virtual world in which panels of a story overlay certain locations. Intersubjectivity, meanwhile, boasts impressively lush visuals for a web-based VR project, though it gets a bit trippy to say the least.

Elsewhere, Piece of String showcases an impressive degree of photogrammetry and Tsukumo offers an authentic exploration of Japanese culture and history. If you want to see them all in VR, you can also download the free Steam app right here. The company also recently published an AR app on iOS and Android.

A Gold Award totaling $20,000 will be given to one winner. Three runners-up will also receive $5,000. Styly will also be hosting a VR exhibition at the new Shibuya PARCO building from December 14 – 22, where you can see these sorts of experiences for yourself.

The awards take place on December 15. We’ll bring you coverage of the winners, and look out for some of these projects to pop up in our next episode of the VR Culture Show!

Disclosure: UploadVR is a media partner for the New View Awards and will be attending the ceremony with accommodation paid for by the awards.

The post 25 New Creative VR Projects Up For 2019 New View Awards appeared first on UploadVR.

Japan’s NEWVIEW Awards 2019 Returns to Celebrate VR Art & Culture

Here in the UK the AIXR held the recent VR Awards event, celebrating the great strides made within the industry, from consumer entertainment to education and enterprise. Over in Japan, however, the upcoming NEWVIEW Awards 2019 is celebrating VR in an entirely different way.

Being held in Shibuya, Tokyo, next month, the NEWVIEW Awards 2019 aim to celebrate the fields of fashion, culture, and art. Under a theme of ‘Design You Ultra-Experience’, 145 submissions have been received since the summer opening of applications, from eight countries.

The idea was to use VR tool Styly to create interesting immersive projects which adhered to one of the critera; Novelty/Originality, Experience or Impact. Submissions could use additional tools in the production process, such as 3DCG, game engine, DAW of example but the submissios had to be made through the STYLY platform. Out of those submitted 25 have been selected to continue into the final rounds. These are:

  • Absences of life by wakuwa / Japan
  • C’est la vie, SHOGYO-MUJO by Saki Takegawa / Japan
  • Piece of String by Wyatt Roy / US
  • VR Manga World for STYLY by Aki Oe / Japan
  • The Pit by Dave Maggio / US / Japan
  • ne.mui by Natuki Ono / Japan
  • The 23-year-old confession by Wong Hoi Ian / Taiwan
  • MODAL by Ryo Takekawa / Japan
  • The Tower of Babel by 525600min / Japan
  • Define Float by takafumi oyama / Japan
  • TSUKUMO by Keisuke Ito / Japan
  • Takkun Museum by Takkun / Japan
  • Merging Memories by Kenichiro Hirai / Japan
  • THE CUBE by Nao Ito / Japan
  • VR Glitch by 5hamburgs Mayu / Japan
  • Her Tranquil Day by Q&A PROJECT / Japan
  • CocoTsuki VRMV – Android Girl – by CocoTsuki Project(CocoTsuki)/ Japan
  • ORgeL by Mask du Video / Japan
  • Transparent Planet – Mika Maruyama / Japan
  • INTERSUBJECTIVITY by God Scorpian / Japan
  • Many sides by C / Japan
  • Dark Room by Yuuki Matsuoka / Japan
  • (SILVER COLORED) WATET TANK by Discont / Japan
  • REMINISCENCE – The Recollection of a Man by TeamMIKAMI (from OMNIBUS JAPAN) / Japan
  • Digital Bonsai [Ko chuu Sya] -Social in a pottery by Ginga Kondo / Japan

NEWVIEW Awards mixed image

All these artworks will then feature in an exhibition at Shibuya Parco for the public to view. When the final event takes place on 15th December, three artworks will be awarded a silver prize of $5,000 USD with one awarded the gold prize of $20,000. There will also be several other awards handed out during the show.

Head on over to the NEWVIEW Awards to see all the submission finalists and for further VR news from around the world, keep reading VRFocus.

Styly’s new AR App Offers Immersive Art on the go

Japanese developer Psychic VR Lab launched its cloud-based virtual reality (VR) platform Styly in 2017, enabling customers to build immersive content through a simple, easy to use drag and drop interface. Today, the company has expanded into augmented reality (AR) releasing a mobile app to view AR art.

Styly AR App

To start with, the app will feature an art piece called World’s End Supernova created by the XR spatial designer “Discont” – who won the Parco VR content award at the 2018 NEWVIEW Awards. The artwork will change based on the user’s surroundings, with natural, green environments offering a similar theme, while more industrial settings likewise.

The piece is also interactive, with users able to change the ending depending on what they tap on screen or how they tilt the device. As such, World’s End Supernova offers a replay factor to entice multiple viewings.

Compatible with iOS and Android devices, it’s the features coming next year which will most likely interest creatives. In Spring 2020 Psychic VR Lab will be releasing a tool so that you can create and publish your own AR content without any programming knowledge. While further details of the tool have yet to be released, it’ll probably feature a similar drag and drop interface to the VR editor.

 

Styly AR App

World’s End Supernova will also be part of the Shibuya Parco XR Showcase, combining art, fashion and culture with VR and AR technologies. Discont’s artwork will be a permanent fixture – QR codes will be used – while #calif SHIBUYA will be a more limited piece. A collaborative piece between Calif and graphic artist Stereo Tennis, once guests scan the QR code a giant picture fills the wall, with objects then popping out to fill the space.

These are obviously examples of what you’ll be able to do with Styly’s new AR app once the creative tool becomes available next year. VRFocus will continue its coverage of Styly, reporting back with the latest app updates.

STYLY Releases VR Editor

STYLY has been around for some time, helping users to create and distribute content for virtual reality (VR) using a cloud and browser-based service. Now STYLY has expanded its functions with a new VR editor.

The VR Editor function is now a standard feature of STYLY, which lets the users edit a space from various viewing points, including first-person or a bird’s-eye view.

The new function lets users scale down the space, as if positioned at a bird’s-eye view, enabling users to view and edit the space, performing functions such as moving, scaling, copying and deleting assets, all from within the VR space.

The purpose of the tool is to solve the problems inherent with VR-space design, such as the problem of perspective or errors in size and scaling when trying to edit or create a VR space from a 2D view.

In order to use the STYLY VR Editor, users need to first open the STYLY WebEditor, for this you will need to register for a STYLY Account. Users then need to import the required asset to a new or existing VR space.

After this import is complete, users need to download and launch the STYLY Steam application. Then open ‘My Scenes’ and click on the pencil icon in the corner of the thumbnail of the target space. Alternatively, it is possible to open the menu in vR space and click the ‘Edit in VR’ button.

The STYLY VR Creative platform is available for Free on Steam, and is compatible with HTC Vive, Oculus Rift and Windows Mixed Reality devices. The STYLY VR Editor lets users move, copy, delete and scale objects as well as move and scale VR spaces.

Further information on STYLY and its VR Editor can be found on the STYLY website. For future coverage of STYLY and other VR platforms, keep checking back with VRFocus.

Psychic VR Lab Announces NEWVIEW AWARD 2018

The NEWVIEW AWARDS 2018 have been announced as part of an on going project to discover virtual reality (VR) content in the fashion, culture and art fields.Dubbed NEWVIEW the project is being run by Psychic VR Labs, which provides the VR Creative Platform STYLY, PARCO and Loftwork.

NEWVIEW AWARDS 2018

The NEWVIEW AWARDS 2018 aims to pursue new expressions, cultures, and lifestyles such as ‘design of super-experience’ created by the next generation of content creators. The project also aims to excavate all creator who are expressing near future, using 3D and virtual space. The theme for the award is “Design you ultra experience” with a prize pool over $35,000 (USD) up for grabs for winning entries.

The entry period for the award will run from today through to July 31st, 2018 with applications open for international submission as well. Psychic VR Labs will be holding a workshop to support the creation of VR works in Tokyo, Kyoto during this period as well. The finalists’ work will be put on display at the end of August, 2018 in Tokyo as well for public viewing. Those finalists will be forty in total, with a final screening scheduled for sometime in early October, 2018.

chloma x STYLY HMD collection image2

Psychic VR Labs’ STYLY allows users to create VR content within a cloud and browser based environment, including the option to share spaces for collaborative working. The free platform empowered content creators to build the VR experiences they want without the need to type a single line of code. The dragon and drop interfact allows for simple, accessible and powerful content creation. Though entries for the NEWVIEW AWARDS using STYLY are encouraged, they are not limited to this platform and can be created with any tool. Work that has already been released is also able to be submitted to the awards.

Some of the examiners on the panel for the NEWVIEW AWARDS 2018 include – and not limited to – René Pinnell, CEO & Founder of Kaleidoscope; Mr.Ito Gabin, editor and professor of Women’s Art College in Japan; Mr. Hideki Matsutake, a musician and synthesizer programmer and Takashi Izumizu / Managing Executive Officer PARCO.

A short promotion video has been released for the NEWVIEW AWARDS 2018 which you can view below. VRFocus will be sure to bring you all the latest on the awards and Psychic VR Labs in the future so stay tuned for more.

Styly Brings Fashion E-Commerce to HoloLens

There’s been an influx of augmented reality (AR) apps such as Curate by Sotheby’s International Realty and Houzz that’ll allow users to visualise decorating their home but few on the fashion front. Now, Japanese developer Psychic VR Lab – the team behind virtual reality (VR) development tool Styly – has announced a new mixed reality (MR) commerce platform for Microsoft HoloLens in collaboration with fashion house chloma.

chloma x STYLY HMD collection image2

The chloma x STYLY HMD collection makes it possible to view and purchase clothes presented in MR. Using Hololens, the companies can immerse users into the fashion brand’s philosophy while watching the full-size 3D models projected in real space from all angles. The service will allow customers shop as well as offering a one-step payment service.

Available in four languages ​​(English, Japanese, Chinese, Russian) for free from the Windows Storechloma x STYLY HMD collection will feature chloma to begin with, with other brands able to use the base model to bring thier designs to the collection.

The app also features photo and video sharing allowing users to send imagery to friends and family, whether they’re interested in buying for themselves or others.

chloma x STYLY HMD collection image3

Chloma is a fashion label established in 2011 by Atsuya Suzuki and Sakuma Reiko. The company says of its designs: “Taking into consideration the relationships between technology, humans, characters, and the Internet, it is proposing an environment and clothing for modern people walking on the boundary between the virtual and real worlds. Expressing fantasy and practicality, the attire is based on the idea that modern people exist between these two worlds.”

How widespread the app will become is another matter, while the app seems focused towards end users in reality HoloLens is still very much an enterprise focused device, retailing for $3000 USD, used by automotive manufacturers like Ford as well as medical institutions.

For something a bit more readily available then there’s always STYLY, a cloud-based service which can be operated on modern web browsers in both Mac and Windows where you can build and share the virtual spaces. For any further updates on the chloma x STYLY HMD collection, keep reading VRFocus.

VR Development Tool STYLY Opens Gallery Website

People creating content in virtual reality (VR) need two main things, the means to create content, and the means to share and distribute it. STYLY offers a cloud and browser service that lets users create VR content, and now that service has expanded to offer a shared space where users can share content.

The newly launched STYLY Gallery allows users to access more than 1000 VR creations such as music videos, 3D art, visual stories and fashion exhibitions. Users can also upload and share their own VR content with other users and creators.

In order to experience the STYLY Gallery, users will need to download the STYLY VR Viewer app. Currently the app is only available for HTC Vive, but there are plans for the app to be made available for Oculus Rift, Samsung Gear VR and Google Daydream.

Users of STYLY VR Viewer can navigate to the STYLY Gallery and find a VR scene they like, and click on the HMD icon in the bottom right corner in order to experience the scene in VR. Using the VR Camera function, users can also capture images from within the VR scene and share those images to the Gallery, or on Facebook and Twitter.

For users who do not have access to a VR headset, an option to use WebView audiovisual is available, and users can click on the cube icon on the bottom right corner of the gallery in order to see the scenes in 2D.

STYLY is the creation of Psychic VR Lab, a Japanese company dedicated to providing a cloud and broswer based service for creating high quality VR content without needing to know programming. The platform accepts imports from tools such as Bender, Maya and Sketchup, among others.

Psychic VR Lab STYLY 2

The company has recently been involved in setting up workshops in Pakistan to help students get involved with VR content creation. VRFocus will continue to bring you news on STYLY and other VR companies and projects.

STYLY öffnet Beta-Phase: VR-Welten im Webbrowser selbst erstellen

Einen interessanten Ansatz verfolgen die japanischen Entwickler von Psychic VR: Über die Web-App STYLY kann man direkt in modernen Browsern auf PC oder Mac VR-Welten kreieren und veröffentlichen. Das klappt ohne Code-Kenntnisse und ist durch das Baukastensystem bestens für 3D-Einsteiger geeignet. Für die echte Erfahrung in der virtuellen Realität steht ein Client für die HTC Vive zur Verfügung, die Unterstützung weiterer VR-Brillen sollen folgen. In STYLY stehen einem etliche fertige 3D-Modelle zur Verfügung. Es lassen sich aber auch eigene Objekte in verschiedenen Formaten sowie Bilder, Musik, Videos und PDF-Dateien einbinden.

STYLY: 3D-Welten für VR im Webbrowser entwerfen

Style Presets

STYLY stellt schon etliche fertige 3D-Modelle sowie Hintergründe zur Verfügung

Mit STYLY veröffentlicht Psychic VR eine Lösung, um virtuelle Welten zu erstellen und mit anderen über die Cloud zu teilen. Code-Kenntnisse benötigt man nicht und muss sich auch bisher nicht groß mit 3D beschäftigt haben – eine recht gut gefüllte Bibliothek mit fertigen Objekten hilft beim Einstieg. Hinzu kommen beispielsweise noch Hintergründe.

STYLY Import

Eine .obj-Datei in STYLY importiert

Es lassen sich aber auch eigene Objekte hochladen und verwenden. Dabei zeigt sich STYLY überaus flexibel und nimmt Bilder, Musik im MP3-Format und Videos von YouTube an. Sogar PDF-Dateien lassen sich einbinden und anschließend als Buch in der virtuellen Realität lesen. An 3D-Objekten verarbeitet STYLY Dateien in den Formaten SKP, FBX, Blender und OBJ, was bei einem ersten Versuch  gut funktionierte. Allerdings benötigte die Web-App etwas Zeit, um die Modelle aufzubereiten. Auch Unity-64-Bit-Dateien lassen sich importieren.

Die Möglichkeiten in STYLY selbst sind begrenzt, was aber gerade Einsteigern hilft, da sie nicht mit Funktionen und Parametereinstellungen überrollt werden. Letztlich ist die Web.-App eine Art Baukasten, in dem man die gewünschten Elemente einfügt, platziert, rotiert und skaliert. Ein direktionales Licht ist vorgegeben, es lassen sich weitere Lichter hinzufügen – allerdings keine weiteren Sorten. Auch ergänzende Parameter wie beispielsweise Lichtfarbe oder Schattenwurf sucht man vergeblich. Dafür gibt es Filter, sodass sich am Ende Effekte wie „Himmel“, „Tropen“ oder „starke Schatten“ hinzufügen lassen.

Ist der Künstler mit seiner erschaffenen Welt zufrieden, kann man sie direkt aus dem Editor heraus veröffentlichen. Der Anwender erhält einen Link, mit dem sich die Szene aufrufen lässt und den man auch anderen zur Verfügung stellen kann. Die Ladezeiten können je nach Komplexität der Welt allerdings erheblich sein. Eine Möglichkeit, die Veröffentlichung rückgängig zu machen, habe ich nicht gefunden.

Für die HTC Vive steht auf der Webseite ein 184 MB schwerer Download bereit, um die 3D-Welten in der virtuellen Realität zu betrachten. Weitere Viewer sollen demnächst für die Oculus Rift, Samsung Gear VR und Google Daydream folgen.

Der Beitrag STYLY öffnet Beta-Phase: VR-Welten im Webbrowser selbst erstellen zuerst gesehen auf VR∙Nerds. VR·Nerds am Werk!

Get Creative as STYLY Launches Beta Platform

There are plenty of ways to get creative in virtual reality (VR) from apps like Google Tilt Brush or Oculus’ Quill to full on professional software like Unity or Unreal Engine 4. For those that want to create VR content but don’t have a headset or the time to learn the intricacies of videogame development software Japanese company Psychic VR Lab has created STYLY, an online platform to build and share the virtual spaces.

STYLY is cloud-based service which can be operated on modern web browsers in both Mac and Windows – you don’t need a powerful VR-ready PC to create content.

Psychic VR Lab STYLY 2

Launched in beta form this month, STYLY’s web-based format means there’s nothing to download. It features a drag and drop interface for ease of use whilst allowing content to be imported from over ten different platforms such as Maya, Blender, YouTube, Instagram, Sketchfab, 3D Warehouse, Unity Asset Store, SoundCloud, SketchUp and Google Tilt Brush / Blocks.

If you do have access to a VR PC and a HTC Vive then you can check your creations. At present the STYLY beta only supports HTC Vive, with support in the works for Oculus rift, Gear VR and Google Daydream.

STYLY is free to start using now. For any further updates keep reading VRFocus.