Samsung Gear VR – can a virtual-reality app save me from digital overload?

Mindfulness technology sounds like an oxymoron. Time to discover whether putting on goggles to gaze at views usually enjoyed only by the ultra-rich can calm an overstimulated brain

At school, I knew a boy who made himself smoke a carton of Marlboro Red in a week. He didn’t like cigarettes, but wanted to get addicted, he said. A mission statement I remember for being a huge amount of stupid to fit into so few words. His logic was that the way to feel less sickened by fags was to smoke 200 of them. Yet I am struck by a similar contradiction while testing the Guided Meditation VR app for Samsung’s virtual-reality headset, Gear VR (£119, samsung.com).

Many of us feel digitally overloaded and crave mental peace. But can the balm to our overstimulated brains lie within another screen? Isn’t mindfulness technology an oxymoron?

The app is admirably simple. It offers a gallery of 360-degree environments, in which one can sit and receive calmly voiced instructions on how to chill out. It is popular, too, already boasting more than 100,000 users. The catch is that you have to own a Samsung Galaxy phone and a Gear to try it, and that wearing VR goggles on any platform makes you look like a right crowbar.

At least the Gear is intuitive. Plugging a phone into the headset brings up a menu, from which I download the free app, using the handheld controller provided. A block of meditation options float against a peaceful background. Pick a world, any world. Shall I sit lotus in the endless dunes of the Gobi or levitate above the clouds or lie under the aurora borealis? Selecting at random, I teleport into a redwood forest, then get bored and try the Alps, then a Japanese meadow and then, er, the Costa del Sol.

I flash through space and time, from a Nordic spa lodge to the painted walls of an ancient Egyptian temple. Waves lap, grass sways, dust motes drift about. The light in the sky shimmers from darkest night to dawn, then it is bouncing off a cave wall in an underground lake. I begin to feel like a god. I am grounded only by the voice emerging from the phone speaker, telling me to focus on my breathing, note my thoughts or visualise my growing belly and the baby within. Picture a healing ball of light, it suggests. “You picture it for me,” I snap, toggling the audio to “off”.

It is not the artwork or the resolution that impresses – the scenes are almost cartoon-like and mostly static. You would never confuse them with reality. It is the sense of scale that gets you. It is visceral and, yes, incredibly calming. You can select your meditation theme, the music and the duration. There are several meditation strands – with 10 levels in each – to choose between, including pregnancy assistance, Hawaiian mantras, Zen thinking and guides to develop focus and compassion.

Inside a huge, empty atrium, I realise that only the ultra-rich usually have access to these kinds of views: undisturbed beaches and resort lounges, empty spas and unbroken horizons. For the week I tested the app, I couldn’t get past the novelty. It unbalanced the meditation. It is uncanny to feel yourself neurologically manipulated, for your body to experience itself in an epic vista, knowing it hasn’t left a small room.

It is unsettling, too. These are ghost towns: no humans visible, little movement. When I look down, there is nobody there, either. Is this peace? Disembodied, uneventful limbo? Not to bring the mood down, but that could be a description of death. One meditation, on the theme of spaciousness, urges me: “Open your eyes and notice the world around you. Feel the world around you.” Which seems a bit rich.

If one aspect of meditation is accepting our given existence, virtual reality seems to be missing the point. Still, if you are simply trying to feel calmer, these empty idylls will do the trick. Why should the rich have all the space? This app would make a useful time-out aid, especially with noise-cancelling headphones in an office. But to experience peace of mind in exchange for all of my body? I would rather take a walk in the park.

They might be mutually exclusive

This portal to other worlds would be a boon to people confined to their beds. But so would a book. And you don’t need a Samsung phone to read.

Wellness or hellness?

Virtually there, but not quite. 3/5

Contributor

Rhik Samadder

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Muse 2: a wearable meditation device worthy of the Riddler
This ‘research-grade’ brain-sensor headband sounds extraordinary and looks stupid. It is fun to use, but is that the point?

Rhik Samadder

01, Apr, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
Tamagotchi kids: could the future of parenthood be having virtual children in the metaverse?
According to an expert on artificial intelligence, would-be parents will soon be able to opt for cheap and cuddle-able digital offspring

31, May, 2022 @12:48 PM

Article image
How women are gaining ground in virtual reality
Forget gaming and porn made by and for male audiences: female producers are using VR to counter the tech industry’s problem with women

Sabrina Faramarzi

14, Aug, 2017 @4:27 PM

Article image
Meditation in virtual reality: it’s like French philosophy meets the Matrix
There’s no paradox in finding your true self via virtual reality because everyday reality is a simulation, says self-help guru Deepak Chopra of his latest venture

Rory Carroll in Los Angeles

17, Aug, 2016 @10:00 AM

Article image
The Valkee Human Charger: can 30 blind mice really be wrong?
Beat the winter blues by pumping light into your ears! If that sounds like a convincing proposition, this iPod lookalike will be right up your street

Rhik Samadder

11, Feb, 2020 @7:00 AM

Article image
Samsung creates drone, robotics and virtual reality lab
South Korean conglomerate sets up new research group as part of Internet of Things push

Samuel Gibbs

10, Feb, 2015 @10:30 AM

Article image
Upright Go: a device that buzzes if you dare to slouch, like a slap from your mother
The little box sticks to your back and alerts you when your posture worsens. But at what cost to your dignity?

Rhik Samadder

18, Mar, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
Facebook sets up 'social VR' team to explore virtual reality beyond games
Mark Zuckerberg surprises Samsung Mobile World Congress event to reveal that ‘people have already watched more than a million hours of video in Gear VR’

Stuart Dredge

22, Feb, 2016 @9:18 AM

Article image
Oculus Rift: 'virtual reality is still niche - it's hard to service millions'
The latest Gear VR device turns a smartphone into a virtual reality headset - but why partner with Samsung to create a rival to your own product? By Alex Hern

Alex Hern

23, Sep, 2014 @6:00 AM

Article image
The Bewater bottle – pretty, but requires you to swallow too much
These gorgeous drinking vessels come pre-installed with semi-precious gemstones intended to energise your water with positive properties. Sounds a bit wishy-washy

Rhik Samadder

07, May, 2019 @7:00 AM