(China Daily) A domestic virtual reality (VR) hardware manufacturer launched a
brand new standalone head mount display (HMD), further stimulating the
segment market already in full swing.
On Tuesday, Baofeng Mojing, the VR arm of the Baofeng Technology Co
Ltd, unveiled the "Matrix" -- VR goggles equipped with 3K resolution
built-in display.
The company claimed the HMD device is the lightest gadget that hit the market among the same category of products.
Feng Xin, CEO of Baofeng, said at the product's launch ceremony that
the device fulfills the three major pain points of the VR device for
consumers, which are the demand for higher definition, lighter weight
and decrease of feeling faint.
The device was priced at 2,499 yuan ($360), and the company said one
hundred early-adaptors will be selected and will receive the products
for hands-on trial, with purchasing at a discount price of 1,999 yuan.
No specific dates for the publicly shipment were announced during the event.
The industry witnessed an investment shrink when fierce homogeneous competition appeared in the market this year.
More companies are forced to curtail the R&D process or even went bankrupt due to suffocated fundraising.
Baofeng Mojing cut down 50 of its headcount and about 100 employees,
who are specialized in content building, were shifted to new established
VR subsidiaries.
"We're hoping to become a dominator in the market to promote the
industry from winter to a vibrant spring," said Feng. "VR will become
commercialized and major vendors in the market will be making profits by
2017 to 2018."
He elaborated that VR will be massively exploited and implemented in
industries such as tourism, education, automobile, real estate and
sports in the next two years and standalone HMDs will become one of the
next bestsellers.
"Domestic vendors, such as Xiaomi and Huawei, as well as major
domestic internet companies and global players, like Facebook, will all
be eager to participate and aim to grab a piece of the market shares,"
Feng added.
The existing consumer VR devices sold on the market include three
major categories - Google's Cardboard-like mobile VR, all-in-one, or
known as standalone HMD, and PC or game console driven goggles, such as
HTC Vive or Sony PSVR.
Many Chinese vendors tend to invest in the first two categories, and
similar to Baofeng Mojing, DeePoon, Pico, 3Glasses, 3Dinlfe and Lingvr
have all unveiled standalone HMDs in recent years.
Neo Zheng, a research manager of client system research at
International Data Corporation (IDC) told chinadaily.com.cn that
according to the market analysis data monitored by the company, the
shipments of VR devices in China is seen continually rising, and the
technology bottlenecks, such as processing performance and battery life
will restrain new vendors who are keen on investing in the standalone
HMD market.
"But we're optimistic about the market boom in the mid- and low- end
market as upstream manufacturers, such as, Intel and Qualcomm launch
more powerful chips and mobile solutions," said Zheng.
Julian Tan, an analyst at the industry consulting company GfK China
also said that the standalone HMD market will see a certain amount of
increase next year.
"More time should be given to make breakthroughs in the core
technologies and consumer education in the segment market," she added.
Another domestic vendor DeePon has announced it will start
crowd-funding on Friday for its latest all-in-one VR device on Taobao.
Latest statistics from IDC show that the worldwide VR headset
shipments will reach 10.1 million units, and by 2020, the volume is
expected to achieve 61 million, with a compound annual growth rate
(CAGR) of 100.7 percent.
Tom Mainelli, IDC's program vice president of Devices & AR/VR,
said, "This year we saw major VR product launches from key players such
as Oculus, HTC, Sony, Samsung, and Google. In the next 12 months, we'll
see a growing number of hardware vendors enter the space with products
that cover the gamut from simple screen less viewers to tethered HMDs to
standalone HMDs."
According to industry consultancy iResearch Consulting Group, China's
VR market revenues are expected to top 5.6 billion yuan this year, up
from 1.5 billion yuan in 2015, and will reach 55 billion yuan by 2020.
Source: China Daily by Liu Zheng
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