For years now, we’ve been hearing dueling predictions about the eventual fate of high-end, consumer-grade virtual reality. Will the technology cause a revolution in gaming and computer interaction? Will it quickly become a faddish flop? Or are we looking at something in between?
It will likely take years to fully answer those questions. But a month after the launch of the HTC Vive and Oculus Rift, software sales estimates from Ars Technica’s Steam Gauge project can at least give us some idea of how quickly one branch of PC-based virtual reality is getting off the ground. The answer, it seems, is a small, slow, and steady start for an HTC Vive market that’s still quite limited by lack of hardware in players’ homes.
We’ll note right up front that Steam Gauge doesn’t give precise sales or gameplay data for Steam games. Instead, it generates estimates for gameplay and ownership based on random sampling of public data from Steam’s own API. While there may be a small margin of error from actual sales numbers, this data should be accurate enough to provide a general view of the market. More details on the Steam Gauge methodology and its limitations can be found in our initial write-up.
For this analysis, we focused on games that were designed for the HTC Vive and its hand-tracking Lighthouse controllers. Games designed to be played exclusively with a standard controller or mouse/keyboard were omitted, since Oculus Rift owners playing through Steam could skew the data for these titles, causing an apples-to-oranges comparison with Vive-exclusive games. Our data on such Rift games is incomplete, in any case, without information from the competing Oculus Store. Some games that support both Lighthouse controllers and standard controls were included, however.
All estimates in this piece were accurate as of May 6. Aggregate data used to generate the below graphs is available on the next page.
How much hardware?
Steam Gauge can’t directly tell us how many HTC Vive units have been shipped to users so far, but it can give us a rough idea. That’s because each Vive headset currently comes packaged with free download codes for three titles: Job Simulator, Fantastic Contraption, and Tilt Brush.




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