Presentation: To be fair to the company (often associated with cheap VR headsets) the DPVR P1 Pro does come nicely packaged. With a white Apple style to it and a nice image of the headset on top. Once inside the box things go a little cheap because all you have is a plastic tray holding the headset in and the rest of the paper work and wires in a box at the back of the headset. All-in-all it’s cheap for sure, but sturdy enough to arrive at you in one piece.
DPVR P1 Pro Light Box Contents
1 x DPVR P1 Pro headset
1 x Charging cable
1 x EU plug
1 x 3DoF Controller
2 x AAA battery
1 x Warranty card
1 x Instruction Manual
Description: New Virtual Reality headsets for business. TheDPVR P1 Pro Light is our most powerful VR headsets, suitable for business and commercial use. DPVR announces our most powerful wireless VR headset model to date, the P1 Pro Light. The new model doubles the power of previous models and are designed for wireless use in enterprise or commercial applications, including new hardware and software customisation services. The P1 Pro Light also has incredible performance, but uses Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 821 processor and is a cost-effective wireless VR headset solution, ideal for high-volume applications.
DPVR P1 Pro Light Specs…
Headset: DPVR P1 Pro Light
Manufacturer: Shanghai Lexiang Technology Co. Ltd
Launch Price: $399 (£291) (with controller)
Release Date: August 2021
Headset Type: VR Headset (All-in-one)
Display: Single LCD at 1280 x 1440 (per eye)
Field of View(FOV): 100° diagonal
Refresh Rate: 90 Hz
CPU: Snapdragon 821 Processor
GPU: Quad-core Kryo (2 x 2.15 GHz, 2 x 1.593 GHz)
Interpupillary Distance Adjustment: No
Screen Focus Adjustment: Yes/No
Weight: 410 g (14.46 oz)
Tracking: 3 DoF Non-positional
Review: While most people will look at what the ‘DPVR P1 Pro Light’ has to offer and reject it straight away and for the average VR consumer that is the right attitude to have about it. But if you are looking to open a cheap VR arcade with some simulators and things inside this might well be the headset for you. But without full 6DOF tracking on both the headset nor the single controller, there is nothing here for most of us. Sure, if you got it for pennies you might enjoy it more than I did and in the right circumstances I can see this being OK, but not for most of us VR users, not when the Oculus Quest 2 is cheaper and by far the better headset.