PlayStation VR2’s PC Adapter is out in the present day, however you do not really want it with sure graphics playing cards.
The adapter takes within the PlayStation VR2’s single USB-C cable on one facet. On the opposite facet is a hard and fast USB-A cable to your PC, a DisplayPort port to your graphics card, and a DC energy port (an influence adapter is included within the field).
However for one era of every of their graphics playing cards strains, NVIDIA and AMD already had a USB-C port that supported DisplayPort, USB, and as much as 27 watts of energy all in a single connection. This was a brand new normal referred to as VirtualLink, meant to supply a single port for VR headsets to connect with, with out the problems typically seen within the low cost USB controllers of motherboards.
VirtualLink was obtainable in some playing cards of RTX 20 collection and AMD RX 6000 collection. For some playing cards such because the RTX 2060 and RTX 2070 this was non-obligatory for producers, whereas on the RTX 2080, RTX 2080 Ti, and Titan RTX it was obligatory.
When you’ve got a USB-C port in your graphics card, you’ve gotten VirtualLink, and all you might want to do to make use of PlayStation VR2 on PC is plug it in and set up the PlayStation VR2 App on Steam, which incorporates the SteamVR driver.
Sadly, regardless of initially having the backing of Oculus, Valve, Microsoft, NVIDIA, and AMD, VirtualLink was deserted by 2020 and dropped from subsequent graphics card generations.
So in case you have an RTX 30 collection, RX 7000 collection, or newer, you will have to pony up the $60 for the adapter to make use of PlayStation VR2 on PC, plus one other $10 or so if you do not have a spare DisplayPort cable mendacity round.