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Vision Pro apps: the good, the bad, and the ridiculous

The Vision Pro is Apple’s newest computing platform, and that means we’re going to see a whole bunch of new apps. Apple pitches apps built for the Vision Pro as “spatial” experiences, and even after our initial review experience, we’ll have to see how those differ from or improve upon the virtual reality and mixed reality experiences we’ve seen on other platforms. Of course, the Vision Pro can run iPhone and iPad apps, too, and display the screen of your nearby Mac laptop or desktop.

Apple says that the Vision Pro’s 600-plus apps available at launch will bring 3D movies from Disney Plus, support from apps like Max and Amazon Prime video, and games like What the Golf? and Super Fruit Ninja. But the walled gardens of today’s tech world work in both directions, and there are some notable day-one omissions — Netflix’s app won’t work on Apple’s headset, and the same goes for YouTube.

The Vision Pro launches on February 2nd, and there are sure to be some good, bad, and flat-out weird apps in the weeks and months to come. (What will be the next I Am Rich?) Here’s all of our coverage of the apps for Apple’s new platform.

  • Wes Davis

    Jun 16

    Wes Davis

    The visionOS 2 beta enables web-based VR.

    Previously an experimental feature, WebXR support is on by default for Vision Pro beta testers, RoadtoVR wrote last week. The open standard allows for VR and AR experiences on the web, such as those listed on this GitHub page.

    However, the outlet writes that AR experiences do not seem to work quite yet, limiting it to fully-VR ones for now.


  • Wes Davis

    May 29

    Wes Davis

    Marvel’s What If…? Vision Pro app is an awkward mix of video game and movie

    A screenshot showing The Watcher standing in a living space, with broken shards floating in the air featuring images of other scenes within them.
    The Watcher is quite large.
    Image: Disney

    Besides watching movies, there’s not all that much to do with Apple’s Vision Pro once you get over the novelty. That’s why I was eager to try Disney and Marvel’s new What If…? An Immersive Story experience / TV show / video game… thing that’s available on May 30th. The companies promised a mixed reality show that would ��push the boundaries of technology.” But what I experienced, while very pretty to look at, ended up feeling like an overlong, no-stakes video game tutorial — with no game to follow it.

    You’ll go through the Vision Pro-exclusive app either by standing in one spot in a virtual environment, watching things play out and participating when prompted to, or in passthrough, where you can move around while cell-shaded 3D AR characters talk to you. You play the “Hero of the Multiverse,” a nameless character who is recruited by The Watcher, narrator on the Disney Plus series, to save the multiverse by acquiring the Infinity Stones. 

    Read Article >
  • Wes Davis

    May 22

    Wes Davis

    Marvel’s What If...? Vision Pro mixed reality story will debut on May 30th.

    Marvel says What If...?  An Immersive Story will have viewers (players?) casting spells, fighting battles with Marvel characters, and using the infinity stones. Judging from the trailer, that means making Doctor Strange’s magic sparks with your hands.

    This edition of What If...? will be “free for a limited time” when the app is available on May 30th.


  • Marvel is bringing a mixed reality edition of What If…? to the Vision Pro

    A still from What If...? — An Immersive Story, showing Marvel characters The Watcher and Wong looking at the viewer, apparently as AR objects in the viewer’s space.
    Who watches the watcher watching The Watcher watching them?
    Image: Marvel / Disney

    The Vision Pro is about to get what sounds like an honest-to-goodness mixed reality video experience from Marvel Studios and ILM Immersive, something the platform sorely needs. The companies announced What If...? An Immersive Story, which they say is Disney Plus’ “first-ever” interactive original content. It’ll come exclusively to Apple’s VR headset and use a mixture of augmented and virtual reality.

    The hour-long What If...? episode is based on Marvel’s Disney Plus show of the same name. It’s a promising development for starved Vision Pro owners, and not just because it’s far longer than the small library of immersive films Apple has offered to date.

    Read Article >
  • Wes Davis

    Apr 28

    Wes Davis

    The best worst way to play Metroid Prime.

    I have finally justified my Vision Pro purchase with the iOS version of the Delta emulator.


  • Wes Davis

    Apr 24

    Wes Davis

    What to do when Metroid Prime 4 still isn’t out.

    What’s it like to play Metroid Prime Hunters in an Apple-approved emulator for iOS — Delta, in this case — on a Vision Pro?

    Well, since nobody asked, I’ll tell you: it’s unexpectedly playable. Emulated Nintendo DS touchscreen aiming works well if you pinch and hold while looking at the upper screen. Sure, you could use buttons to aim in Hunters, but why would you?


  • Best Buy launches an augmented reality shopping app for the Vision Pro.

    Apple’s headset doesn’t have an official Netflix app, but MacRumors mentions Best Buy’s app has arrived.

    Just put on your Vision Pro, open the Best Buy Envision app and scroll through hundreds of options to see them appear digitally, right in front your eyes, in your physical space.

    Now, all we need is a Netflix app for those virtual TVs.


    Simulated view of the Best Buy Vision Pro app projecting LG and Amazon TVs into a living room setting next to a page of Best Buy product listings with details and prices.
    Augmented Best Buy Reality
    Image: Best Buy
  • The Supercut app brings good Netflix to the Vision Pro

    A screenshot of the Supercut app, showing the service selector with Netflix and Prime Video as options.
    The service selector in Supercut.
    Screenshot: Wes Davis / The Verge

    Netflix said last year that it had no plans for a native app for the Apple Vision Pro — a disappointment for owners given how well-suited it is for the task. Now, a new app called Supercut brings Netflix streaming to Apple’s headset without letterboxing bars on the top and bottom of the video; it also supports 4K streaming with Dolby Atmos and Dolby Vision.

    Made by developer Christian Privitelli, Supercut offers playback controls — including subtitles, audio output, playback speed, and the ability to skip ahead or back a few seconds — plus the ability to switch between profiles on the fly. It even gives you a visual indicator telling you whether your video is outputting in one or both of the Dolby formats and what resolution you’re streaming at.

    Read Article >
  • Do I feel less lonely in the Vision Pro?

    That’s what I kept asking myself when testing out spatial Personas with Wes. The short of it is your ghostly Personas are now free to interact in any SharePlay enabled app, so you can watch movies, play games, and collaborate on projects. It’s neat — and you can interact more with other people. But seeing Wes’ head just float in my office also reminded me he really wasn’t there.


  • Robots, virtually in disguise.

    Transformers: Dark of the Moon is now available in 3D on the Vision Pro Apple TV Plus app, joining free-for-subscribers films that Apple added to its streaming service in March.

    New, but not in 3D, are several other movies that probably should be — including the first three John Wick films, Armageddon, Taken, and Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol. The new crop of movies is available for between four and eight weeks, reports MacRumors.


    A gif of the movies that are new to Apple TV Plus for April.
    Scrolling the new movies.
    Screen recording: Wes Davis / The Verge
  • Now Apple Vision Pro Personas can float freely across different apps

    A GIF of the Apple Vision Pro’s Spatial Personas feature.
    You’re not limited to hovering in FaceTime.
    Video: Apple

    Starting today, Vision Pro personas will be able to do more than hover like a ghost in FaceTime calls. Now, you can use them in SharePlay-enabled apps to collaborate, play games, or watch media with other people.

    Apple is calling this a “Spatial Persona.” The idea is to make it feel like you’re in the same physical space as another user. It was part of what Apple showed in developer previews last year but hasn’t been available in the actual Persona beta until now. It’s a bit hard to imagine, but you can see what it looks like in the video below.

    Read Article >
  • Wes Davis

    Mar 30

    Wes Davis

    Is the MLB’s Vision Pro app ready for the big leagues?

    Jason Snell of Six Colors details his experience with the MLB’s visionOS app now that the season is underway. Of the Gameday feature that puts a 3D-animated baseball field in your space during a game, he writes:

    I couldn’t find support for Gameday when I first used the app, though later when playing back an archived stream, I did find Gameday available—from within the video playback, so you can’t use it for a game you’re not watching on the app. And it’s immersive, so you can’t put it up and then do something else, which is also probably a mistake.

    Ah, the early days of the Vision Pro’s app ecosystem.


  • Wes Davis

    Mar 27

    Wes Davis

    The Vision Pro is getting some new Apple Arcade games.

    Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City, Gibbon: Beyond the Trees, and Spire Blast will each get Vision Pro “spatial” apps tomorrow, Apple shared in a release emailed to The Verge.

    Also, rhythm game Synth Ridersaka the only game I’ve been coming back to besides bullet hell shooter Void-X — has been updated with Game Center leaderboards and a pass-the-headset Party Mode.


    A GIF of Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City running in a floating window on the Vision Pro.
    Alto’s Odyssey running on the Vision Pro.
    Image: Apple
  • Wes Davis

    Mar 18

    Wes Davis

    You can watch March Madness games for free in the Vision Pro.

    The NCAA’s March Madness Live app is also getting a new, swipeable vertical video highlights feed.

    The “Vision Pro compatibility” means the iPad app, so you won’t get any “spatial” features, but at least it’s there (unlike, say, YouTube). What, did the Samsung Gear VR app not do well or something?

    The NCAA also says it’s offering “expanded live game radio” for Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.


  • Wes Davis

    Mar 16

    Wes Davis

    You can now browse Vision Pro apps on the web.

    It’s essentially the same thing you’d see if you were browsing the store in the Vision Pro itself — a few curated lists of native apps here, some recommended iPad apps there.

    But at least there’s a way to casually cruise those sweet spatial apps without popping the headset on now.


  • You can watch these new IMAX documentaries on your Vision Pro headset.

    It’s getting four: A Beautiful Planet 3D, Pandas 3D, Super Power Dogs 3D, and Deep Sky. You’ll also see trailers for new releases.

    These are part of a wave of new spatial films on the Vision Pro. Apple debuted 150 3D movies at launch through Apple TV Plus and other streamers, including recent releases like Avatar: The Way of Water and Dune.


  • You can watch TV on a CRT in the Vision Pro.

    If you miss the kitchen TV, then this Television app for Apple’s headset has got your back. You’re able to watch videos (even spatial ones, if you like) on a whole bunch of different 3D models of TVs, from a portable CRT to a Samsung Frame lookalike.

    I want to watch iCarly on a big bulky silver 2000s console.


  • Wes Davis

    Feb 18

    Wes Davis

    What it’s like to make an app for the Vision Pro.

    In this interview for the Voices of VR podcast, Apollo developer Christian Selig shares his experience creating Juno, an unofficial YouTube player he created for the Vision Pro in only a week’s time.

    Despite the small number of people who own the headset, he says he’s earned enough from it to buy “multiple” Vision Pros.


  • Emma Roth

    Feb 15

    Emma Roth

    The Apple Vision Pro is getting two VR gaming staples.

    Job Simulator and Vacation Simulator are both making their way to Apple’s headset, developers Owlchemy Labs announced. They don’t say when the games will arrive, but they should offer a welcome stress reliever for whenever you’re not filling out spreadsheets or attending Zoom calls.


  • Ponder this (shiny) orb on the Vision Pro.

    XR designer Greg Madison has created this chrome ball as a fun way to visualize how Apple’s headset can reflect lighting in augmented reality based on your real environment.

    Reflection mapping is hardly new or unique to the Vision Pro, but Madison’s experiment is commendably easy to play with — just open the file in this Google Drive link while you’re wearing the headset.


  • Apple recommends some Arcade games for Vision Pro owners.

    Assuming you’re going to keep your Vision Pro headset for a while, Apple has highlighted some of the spatial games already available that are optimized for its headset’s eye, hand, and voice controls.

    They include What the Golf, Super Fruit Ninja, Synth Riders, and Lego Builder’s Journey (shown below), as well as some upcoming titles, like Alto’s Odyssey: The Lost City, Gibbon: Beyond the Trees, and Spire Blast.


    Animated image showing the augmented reality Lego game on Vision Pro, with two Lego figurine characters building a bridge on a desk.
    Lego Builder’s Journey
    Image: Apple
  • TikTok’s native app arrives for the Vision Pro

    TikTok video overlaid on living room inside Vision Pro.
    The Vision Pro app offers a familiar interface.
    Image: TikTok

    Apple’s Vision Pro headset now has a native TikTok app, the shortform video service has announced. 

    The interface will look relatively familiar to anyone who has used TikTok’s traditional iOS or Android apps, with a vertically oriented player for videos as well as buttons to like, comment, favorite, and share. But the company has taken advantage of the increased screen real estate offered by the Vision Pro to spread out other interface elements, showing comments and creator profiles on a pane to the right so they don’t obscure the main video player.

    Read Article >
  • Totally unofficial Apple Vision Pro YouTube app makes it to version 1.1.

    Call me pessimistic, but I was sure Google would immediately slam the breaks on Christian Selig’s third-party YouTube app (especially now the company plans to make a YouTube app of its own). But Juno is still going strong, and Selig has just released its 1.1 version update. Improvements include a playback quality selector, drag and drop support, bug fixes, and other performance and UI tweaks.


    Juno 1.1

    [christianselig.com]

  • Emma Roth

    Feb 12

    Emma Roth

    Vision Pro app downloads are a mixed bag so far.

    Immersive Wire spoke to Vision Pro developers and found that apps like JigSpace, which was included in Apple’s press materials, got over 14,000 installs in the span of a week. Other apps have struggled to get past a 1,000-download threshold.

    It obviously helps to be featured by Apple, but Immersive Wire reports some developers attribute lower download numbers to a lack of discoverability on the App Store. Developers say search capabilities need improvement, and the top 10 app lists should be easier to find.


  • This is the entire Vision Pro motion sickness label.

    Apple’s motion sickness support page tells you how to minimize possible nausea and other symptoms while using the Vision Pro. The company even offers a little label to tell you when an app or “Apple Immersive Media” has “larger amounts of motion.”

    And this is it. This is how you know.