Manos a la obra con las pantallas 3D Acer SpatialLabs View en Computex 2022
The demos that matter more to the TPU readership should be the game demos, of which the main one was God of War running on a desktop PC. Acer claims to support some 500 game titles today and although a custom launcher is required to get the 3D effect in games, Acer told us that games from Steam, Epic etc. should work just fine via its launcher. Here the 3D effect is more of a depth effect, since unless the game in question incorporates support for the display, there’s no way to get objects in the game to protrude out of the display. The game did get that extra 3D dimension that older solutions that rely on glasses had, but the overall feeling was very different. Sadly there’s no way of presenting what it was like using the display, but it was very much an impressive experience.
The second game demo was of a racing game, running on the new Acer Predator Helios 300 laptop and an Xbox controller could be used to drive the vehicles in the game. As impressive as this technology is, it’s not without its faults. Ante todo, if the cameras lose the eye-tracking for some reason, the display goes all crazy and people that suffer from motion sickness might want to wait a bit longer before investing in something like this. The cameras have a sweet spot for detection and once you go outside of that area, the 3D effect is no longer there.
This is why Acer went with a 15.6-inch panel, although it’s a 4K panel, which was very crisp and sharp. Sin embargo, it’s also a 60 Hz panel and the brightness is only 400 liendres, which puts it in a category most gamers wouldn’t consider. Acer is working on improving the technology so they can bring it to larger displays and hopefully the price will come down as well, as US$1,099 is a lot of money to spend on a display for most consumers, especially with such a niche market at the moment. The company is looking at some other vertical markets, so don’t be surprised if you’ll find a version of this as part of the in-flight entertainment system on air planes in the future.