Game controllers have Watch The End of the Fucking Worldhad rumble or vibration since Nintendo created the Rumble Pak for the Nintendo 64, so why doesn't the rest of your gaming gear have haptic feedback for greater immersion?
Honestly, that's the big question I wondered myself as I sat in front of Razer's new 27-inch gaming monitor and shot a bunch of enemies in Overwatchand Doomand feltevery gunfire and movement via vibrations tucked within its concept gaming chair, keyboard wrist rest pad, gaming mouse, and Nari Ultimate haptic-feedback headphones.
SEE ALSO: Oculus Quest is the savior VR needsCinemas have long tried to convince moviegoers to pay extra for a "4D" or haptic-based experience where the seat vibrates in unison with the action on screen. So why not bring this experience to gamers?
When I asked a Razer product manager during a briefing at CES 2019, he shrugged and said he wasn't sure why nobody beat them to the idea.
While only concept products at the moment, my brief time feeling vibrations from the haptic motors embedded within the back of a gaming chair, along the wrist rest pad attached to a gaming keyboard, within a gaming mouse, and ear-to-ear across my face convinced me there's more to upping gaming experience than simply hyping up refresh rates, HDR, higher resolutions, or even more realistic textures.
VR and 3D aside, gaming is mostly done in in 2D. But an immersive experience can extend beyond the screen into the tangible -- actions experienced through the senses -- and add new depth.
Besides sight and sound, touch is frontier that can be tapped into to make you feellike you're inside of the game. (One day some company will no doubt add smell and taste to gaming, but for now touch seem to be the most hygienic.)
The Nari Ultimate gaming headphones teased Razer's interest in turning sound into haptic feedback. The next logical step is to include this same "Hypersense" haptic tech in all of the other gaming gear, like your chair and mouse to take this tactility to another level.
It's difficult to describe how Hypersense really feels without you actually experiencing the feedback yourself. What I can say is it doesn't feel cheap or lifeless like the Kor-Fx haptic gaming vest I reviewed years ago.
The vibrations are less of a monotone rumble and more delicate like the sensitive HD Rumble vibrations within the Nintendo Switch's Joy-Con controllers. This is because the vibrations are all based off the game's sound effects. A short jump would produce a softer vibration than a deep fall and a shot in the arm with a shot gun would feel harsher than a pistol.
This is what an integratedgaming experience feels like — one where all of the gear is synced with RGB lighting to the game and augmented with haptic feedback. I liken it to using a controller with rumble and then just hating your non-rumble controller afterwards. Once you feel vibrations after landing from a jump or the reverb from a rocket launcher, it's hard to go back to anything else.
Razer loves to come to CES and trot out wild concepts like its triple-screen laptop, or a laptop that docks the Razer Phone, or a projector that extends your gaming beyond the TV and onto your walls. Most of these never see a commercial release. But the Hypersense concept products are far more realistic and feasible than past concepts.
Razer already sells the Nari Ultimate headphones for $199 with sound-based haptic feedback. Price out your favorite gaming chair, Razer mouse, and gaming wrist pad and then add a premium to it — a "Razer tax" if you can probably come to a good number for how much these device would cost ya.
If these products ever become a reality, they won't come cheap. Developers will also need to get onboard with adding rumble to all of these accessories and the return might not be very high for adding such functionality in for a niche user base. Razer says it's already talking to several software developers and programming support wouldn't be too much of a challenge.
The demand needs to exist first, though. Judging by the huge and loyal cult following Razer has amassed over the last decade, I'd say gamers are gonna wantthese Hypersense products once they try them.
Topics CES Gaming
Best sex toy deals (June 2025)Cooking with Dante Alighieri by Valerie StiversJay Duplass talks Hades' big introduction to 'Percy Jackson and the Olympians'Wordle today: The answer and hints for January 25Magical scientists name spider after the Sorting Hat from Harry PotterApple Car may be coming much, much later than we hopedTrump falsely claims that nobody knows if global warming is realOn Cary Grant, Darryl Pinckney, and Whit Stillman by The Paris ReviewRyan Gosling reacts to Margot Robbie and Greta Gerwig's 'Barbie' Oscar snubsExxon CEO Rex Tillerson, climate archvillain, to be named secretary of stateWhy reindeer near the North Pole are shrinkingSeven, Seven, Seven: A Week in Cambridge, Massachusetts by J. D. DanielsGoethe’s Advice for Young Writers by Johann Peter EckermannPast, Present, Perfect: An Overdue Pilgrimage to Stonington, Connecticut by Henri ColeBest smart thermostat deal: Score a refurbished Amazon Smart Thermostat for just $39.99Exxon CEO Rex Tillerson, climate archvillain, to be named secretary of stateBona Nit, Estimat (An Ordinary Night) by Robert Glück'Palworld' on sale: Save 10% on Steam until Thursday at 1 p.m. ETOn Hannah Black’s Pandemic Novella, Barthelme, and Pessoa by The Paris ReviewOdysseus’s Kinesphere by Annie On Nate Lippens by Eileen Myles Alice Notley’s Prophecies by David Schurman Wallace I Got Snipped: Notes after a Vasectomy by Joseph Earl Thomas Five Letters from Seamus Heaney by Seamus Heaney Sad People Who Smoke: On Mary Robison by Adam Wilson Bolaño in Girona: A Friendship by Javier Cercas Prescribing Creativity: The Meta Letters to James Schuyler by Joe Brainard Death by Sea by Rosa Shipley Wild Desire by Pedro Lemebel Of Unicorns: On My Little Pony by Lucy Ives Hannah Arendt, Poet by Srikanth Reddy The Black Madonna by Aaron Robertson “We’re Never Alone” by Tobias Wolff The ABCs of Gardening by Adrienne Raphel On Being Warlike by Joyelle McSweeney The Dreams and Specters of Scholastique Mukasonga by Marta Figlerowicz Letters from Shirley Hazzard and Donald Keene by Shirley Hazzard and Donald Keene Making of a Poem: Sara Gilmore on “Safe camp” by Sara Gilmore Interrupted, Again by Joanna Kavenna
1.8396s , 10159.90625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch The End of the Fucking World】,Openness Information Network