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Oculus VR headsets will soon require a Facebook account, and that sucksOculus account support will end in 2023.
Oculus account support will end in 2023.

Oculus plan to make Facebook accounts mandatory for all of their VR headsets, starting with new users from October 2020,Oculus announcedlast night. The move comes as part of the VR giant’s plans to end support for existing Oculus accounts on January 1st 2023 and shift everyone over to the same system as their parent company, Facebook. The idea is that it will “make it easier to find, connect and play with friends in VR,” according to Oculus, as well as “make it possible to integrate many of the features people know and love on Facebook.”
It’s also a sure-fire way to make sure swathes of VR users never buy an Oculus headset ever again.
As for existing Oculus account owners, they will be given the option to merge their Oculus and Facebook accounts starting from October, so they can continue using their VR headsets as normal. If they choosenotto merge their accounts, they will be able to carry on using their Oculus account for another two years, but support for it will end on January 1st 2023.
After this point, users will still be able to use their Oculus devices, but “full functionality will require a Facebook account,” Oculus have said.
“We will take steps to allow you to keep using content you have purchased, though we expect some games and apps may no longer work. This could be because they include features that require a Facebook account or because a developer has chosen to no longer support the app or game you purchased.”
Apart from already laying the blame at developers' doors, the real kicker is that “all future unreleased Oculus devices will require a Facebook account, even if you already have an Oculus account,” according to the blog post. Well, that’s me never buying a new Oculus headset, then, as I deleted my Facebook account after theCambridge Analytica scandalrevealed the social network had been leaking millions of users' personal data for political advertising, and I’m not going to create another one just for the purposes of VR. I don’t want any of my data tied up with that platform full stop, and even the idea of creating an empty shell account with a fake name and zero info still sits uncomfortably with me.
The whole thing is just a big kick in the teeth, and I hate how much this has soured my opinion of both theOculus Rift SandOculus Quest. They’re irritatingly good VR headsets compared to their HTC competition, and ever since I got them all in for testing around the launch ofHalf-Life: Alyx, the Oculus Rift S has been mytop VR headset recommendationfor those who don’t want to shell out for the Valve Index. Now, I’m not sure I can recommend it quite as wholeheartedly as I did before.
Your feelings about Facebook may differ, of course, but for the many hundreds and thousands like me who have consciously tried to distance themselves from Facebook over the last couple of years, this news comes as a low blow indeed.