Itll play nice with SteamVR, at least

We knew a PC adapter for PlayStations VR2 headsetwas on the way, andit looked to be fairly soon- and we were right!

Sonys shiniest virtual reality offering is now confirmed to be adding official PC support via a nifty wired adapter at the start of August.

Itll cost 50/$60 - but whether its worth the price given a number of key features will be missing is another question entirely…

On the good news side of things, the PlayStation VR2 PC adapter will support SteamVR out of the box when it releases on August 7th, meaning youll be able to hook it up and playvirtual reality gameson Steam - including Valves ownHalf-Life: Alyx.

A PlayStation VR2 headset plugged into a computer running Half-Life: Alyx

To do that, youll just need to hook up the headset to your PC using the adapter and a DisplayPort 1.4 cable, then run both SteamVR and the new PlayStation VR2 app, which will let you tweak around with controls for things like play area.

Thats great news, especially as the VR2 is a very comfortable headset by all accounts and puts some lovely 120Hz 4K (2000x2040) OLED displays in front of your eyes across a 110-degree field of view.

Whats not so great is that many of the features that arguably make the VR2 a strong contender for one of thebest VR headsetsoverall wont be supported on PC, even when using the official adapter.

The box and adapter for Sony’s PlayStation VR2 headset on PC.

Notably, those panels, crisp as they are, wont support HDR on PC, and the VR2s impressive eye-tracking wont work either - though foveated rendering without using eye-tracking will still function.

Headset feedback also wont function, nor will the handheld controllers DualSense-based adaptive triggers or haptic feedback beyond simple rumble.

That leaves thelist of working featuresat the panels themselves, the headsets see-through view - handy in case youre about to bump into something - and the controllers finger-touch detection, along with 3D Audio in some games - albeit using SteamVRs audio tech rather than the PS5-only Tempest 3D AudioTech.

If youve already got a VR2, being able to play VR games on PC without having to cough up for a whole new headset seems a no-brainer.

If youre weighing this up against other PC offerings such as the Meta Quest 3, though - which is already cheaper than the base VR2, and almost on par feature-wise due to these limitations - the combined cost of the VR2 itself the adapter certainly makes this a harder sell, in my opinion.

Still, the VR2 apparently hasnt exactly set the world on fire since it came out a couple of years ago, so it might be youre able to grab one for a steal and make the most of its nice hardware - even if some of its promising potential goes unrealised on PC.