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Valve celebrate SteamVR bug squashing with giant scans of real, perished bugsNice update, but also, eww

Nice update, but also, eww

Russell from Half-Life Alyx holding up a red flyswatter.

Valve have launched the SteamVR 1.23 update, and to mark the occasion, they’re letting you… look at high-quality scanned models of genuinely deceased insects? That they found? I guess???Key technical improvements to SteamVR include multiple crash fixes, smoother controller animations and new extension support for the OpenXR platform; thefull patch notes are on Steam. But the update also adds a new SteamVR Home setting that – and I quote, with emphasis Valve’s - “showcases CT scans ofactual dead bugswe found lying on the ground outside our office.” See? TheValve Indexisn’t just for playingHalf-Life Alyx, eh.To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsWatch on YouTubeA CT scan, as the blog post explains, involves shooting X-rays at the subject – in this case, the expired bug population of Bellevue, Washington – then generating a model from the captured data that can display different density levels. These models are then converted into simpler versions that the average gaming PC can actually display without choking. Should you visit SteamVR’s virtual critter mausoleum, then, you’ll be able to peek at the specimens’ insides as well as their ill-fated exteriors. You’ll just have to subscribe to the models on theSteamVR Workshop.For the sake of those with phobias, I’ve crudely edited this smiling meat face over a screenshot of one of the bug models. Cheers.This might be of interest to nature fans, to be fair, and the Home destination even provides a floating scale so you can see how big the bug was before a Valve intern grabbed it off the floor. Should you own one of thebest VR headsetsbut want something lesscrawlyto look forward to, there’s always there’s the impressively ambitiousHalf-Life Alyx: Levitation, a fully voiced and animated mod project coming later this year.

Valve have launched the SteamVR 1.23 update, and to mark the occasion, they’re letting you… look at high-quality scanned models of genuinely deceased insects? That they found? I guess???Key technical improvements to SteamVR include multiple crash fixes, smoother controller animations and new extension support for the OpenXR platform; thefull patch notes are on Steam. But the update also adds a new SteamVR Home setting that – and I quote, with emphasis Valve’s - “showcases CT scans ofactual dead bugswe found lying on the ground outside our office.” See? TheValve Indexisn’t just for playingHalf-Life Alyx, eh.To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsWatch on YouTubeA CT scan, as the blog post explains, involves shooting X-rays at the subject – in this case, the expired bug population of Bellevue, Washington – then generating a model from the captured data that can display different density levels. These models are then converted into simpler versions that the average gaming PC can actually display without choking. Should you visit SteamVR’s virtual critter mausoleum, then, you’ll be able to peek at the specimens’ insides as well as their ill-fated exteriors. You’ll just have to subscribe to the models on theSteamVR Workshop.For the sake of those with phobias, I’ve crudely edited this smiling meat face over a screenshot of one of the bug models. Cheers.This might be of interest to nature fans, to be fair, and the Home destination even provides a floating scale so you can see how big the bug was before a Valve intern grabbed it off the floor. Should you own one of thebest VR headsetsbut want something lesscrawlyto look forward to, there’s always there’s the impressively ambitiousHalf-Life Alyx: Levitation, a fully voiced and animated mod project coming later this year.

Valve have launched the SteamVR 1.23 update, and to mark the occasion, they’re letting you… look at high-quality scanned models of genuinely deceased insects? That they found? I guess???

Key technical improvements to SteamVR include multiple crash fixes, smoother controller animations and new extension support for the OpenXR platform; thefull patch notes are on Steam. But the update also adds a new SteamVR Home setting that – and I quote, with emphasis Valve’s - “showcases CT scans ofactual dead bugswe found lying on the ground outside our office.” See? TheValve Indexisn’t just for playingHalf-Life Alyx, eh.

To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settings

To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settings

A CT scan, as the blog post explains, involves shooting X-rays at the subject – in this case, the expired bug population of Bellevue, Washington – then generating a model from the captured data that can display different density levels. These models are then converted into simpler versions that the average gaming PC can actually display without choking. Should you visit SteamVR’s virtual critter mausoleum, then, you’ll be able to peek at the specimens’ insides as well as their ill-fated exteriors. You’ll just have to subscribe to the models on theSteamVR Workshop.

For the sake of those with phobias, I’ve crudely edited this smiling meat face over a screenshot of one of the bug models. Cheers.

A smiling meat face covering up one of Valve’s SteamVR Home CT bug scans.

This might be of interest to nature fans, to be fair, and the Home destination even provides a floating scale so you can see how big the bug was before a Valve intern grabbed it off the floor. Should you own one of thebest VR headsetsbut want something lesscrawlyto look forward to, there’s always there’s the impressively ambitiousHalf-Life Alyx: Levitation, a fully voiced and animated mod project coming later this year.