That’s what I use. Windows - alt - R starts and stops recording, without having to open the game bar.Actually, isn't there also video capture built directly into WIndows 10 these days. Don't you just hit <Windows Key>+G to bring up the "game bar" and then hit record? Again, never tried this myself but I just suddenly remembered it.
The main thing I would say is not to try and push on through the motion sickness. When you start to feel queazy stop and do something else for a bit. If you're not careful you can actually build a mental association between VR and feeling sick, I've even heard stories of people feeling sick just from the smell of the headset. With time and patience nearly everyone gets acclimatised eventually. Of course time and patience are not ideal bedfellows of a Buckyball race.I was dead excited to see this happening but I've hit a snag. I just got myself a shiny new oculus and want to play using it, I've spent two nights trying to learn to use the galaxy map and other things with it. But now even traveling to the event I'm getting motion sickness. I can't imagine what it will be like making screaming turns! How long before you lose the motion sickness does anyone know?
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!Well, last night's attempt wasn't very good, primarily because I switched to Horizons (definitely felt like a slight improvement, especially in the galaxy map) and I had to redo some bindings on the fly, but I got up early enough to squeeze in an attempt this morning. And what a run it was! I had only messed up one braking maneuver up, and stuck most of my landings. I could still improve my scooping times at LHS 6309, but I emerged at Tesla Station at the perfect angle to see the airlock without having to be directly in front of the station.
I was a minute and half ahead of my best time, and I was on my way to see Spock before heading back home, when this happened:
Can't comment on the Oculus as I use HTC Vive Pro. What I find causes me motion sickness is when the FPS is low and the screen starts to stutter or if there is still image stuck on the screen and I'm moving my head and image isn't moving within the VR space.I was dead excited to see this happening but I've hit a snag. I just got myself a shiny new oculus and want to play using it, I've spent two nights trying to learn to use the galaxy map and other things with it. But now even traveling to the event I'm getting motion sickness. I can't imagine what it will be like making screaming turns! How long before you lose the motion sickness does anyone know?
Always keep an eye out for what's front of you.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wu4JoQBZvAg
Not something you want to see while flying in VR, gave me a heart attack and more importantly ruined a good run
What a glorious whale!Somehow managed to get an obscured jump and was sick of flying the iEagle so I took a break and ran the Orca around once, so much more fun to fly.
Source: https://youtu.be/Zl5Bs_RBtXk
I was dead excited to see this happening but I've hit a snag. I just got myself a shiny new oculus and want to play using it, I've spent two nights trying to learn to use the galaxy map and other things with it. But now even traveling to the event I'm getting motion sickness. I can't imagine what it will be like making screaming turns! How long before you lose the motion sickness does anyone know?
Can't comment on the Oculus as I use HTC Vive Pro. What I find causes me motion sickness is when the FPS is low and the screen starts to stutter or if there is still image stuck on the screen and I'm moving my head and image isn't moving within the VR space.
If the motion sickness your seeing is due low FPS then it be worth seeing if Oculus has something similar to Steam VR's asynchronous reprojection. if a game can't reach the refresh rate of the headset, in my case 90FPS, reprojection will drop the frame rate of the game to 45 FPS and will synthesise every other frame to get the frame rate up and smooth out motion which can help out.
Also like Alec said, take breaks when the motion sickness starts to kick in.