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Meta has admitted that Mark Zuckerberg’s virtual legs on show during its online event this week weren’t quite the real deal.
At the annual Connect conference on Tuesday, the Meta CEO appeared as a cartoonish digital version of himself to announce new products and features.
He said avatars in Horizon Worlds, the firm’s virtual social app, would be getting legs soon, and demonstrated his own virtual pair by jumping up and down.
But Meta has since admitted that the demo ‘featured animations created from motion capture’.
Motion capture involves using sensors to record a person’s movements in real life, and translating them into computer-animated images.
The legs that Zuckerberg’s avatar demonstrated in the video demo may therefore be more lifelike than legs in the metaverse.
Zuckerberg said avatars in Horizon Worlds, the firm’s virtual social app, would be getting legs soon, and demonstrated his own virtual pair by jumping up and down
Meta said: ‘To enable this preview of what’s to come, the segment featured animations created from motion capture’
‘To enable this preview of what’s to come, the segment featured animations created from motion capture,’ Meta told Ian Hamilton, editor of Upload VR.
Early avatar models introduced by Meta, as well as Microsoft, have been ridiculed for appearing as legless, waist-up bodies floating around their virtual environments.
Meta has therefore been focused on bringing legs to avatars within the metaverse, although the firm’s CEO said doing so is ‘hard’.
‘There’s one more feature coming soon that’s probably the most requested feature on our roadmap – legs,’ Zuckerberg said during the presentation.
‘I think everyone has been waiting for this. But seriously, legs are hard. Which is why other virtual reality systems don’t have them either.’
Meta will be bringing full body avatars, complete with legs, to Horizon Worlds first, then to Meta’s other products, he said.
Horizon Worlds was released by Meta in December last year, and allows users to gather with others, play games and build their own virtual worlds.
It’s an early step in Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg’s ambition to transform the platform into a ‘metaverse’ – a collective virtual shared space featuring avatars of real people.
At the annual Connect conference on Tuesday, the Meta CEO appeared as a cartoonish digital version of himself to announce new products and features
For the first time, avatars will have all four limbs. The previous version of avatars cuts off at the torso. But what legs will look like in the metaverse are still to be seen, after it was revealed that the legs in Meta’s presentation ‘featured animations created from motion capture’
Meta gave the first look at its new Quest Pro virtual reality headset that the company said is a gamechanger for its metaverse
The biggest announcement from Connect on Tuesday was the launch of the Meta Quest Pro VR headset, targeted at professionals in creative fields.
The £1,499 headset, aimed at architects, engineers and designers, among others, boasts new features that are meant to improve users’ perception of actually being in the presence of others.
The device is the follow-up to Meta’s Oculus Quest 2, which was released in October 2020, and the original Oculus Quest, released in May 2019.
It is 40 per cent thinner than the Quest 2 due to new pancake lenses that also delivers 75 per cent more contrast and includes new self-tracking controllers that ‘work like an extension of your hand’.
Quest Pro, which was touted by Zuckerberg as a ‘gamechanger’ for bringing the metaverse to life, will be available on October 25.
Meta chief executive Mark Zuckerberg remains devoted to investing heavily in the metaverse – an ’embodied internet’
It’s now a year since Zuckerberg’s firm announced it was renaming itself, as part of its long-term project to turn its social media platform into a metaverse.
Zuckerberg, who co-founded Facebook in his dormitory room at Harvard University in 2004, has described the metaverse as an ’embodied internet’.
Within years, Facebook users will be able to use the platform not on their phones or computers, but by donning a headset.
Rather than swiping the screen of a device, they could potentially meet up with a Facebook friend in a virtual shared space – like an ultra-realistic simulation of another planet or an idyllic garden – and vocally chat to each other’s avatars.