Niantic CEO John Hanke has shared a teaser picture for the corporate’s first AR glasses. The firm, recognized for growing Pokemon Go, has been working extensively into the Augmented Reality spectrum. The reveal solely confirmed part of the Augmented Reality glasses however would not specify how the glasses will work. Niantic is finest recognized for growing AR video games like Pokemon Go, Ingress, and Harry Potter: Wizards Unite. Niantic can also be working with Nintendo to develop an AR-based cell sport for the favored puzzle sport, Pikmin.
In a latest tweet teasing the AR glasses from Niantic, Hanke stated, “Exciting to see the progress we’re making to enable new kinds of devices that leverage our platform.” The picture solely confirmed the temples of the glasses together with a strap that options the Niantic emblem in orange. The temples appear thicker and seem to function a tiny speaker grille. The reveal, nevertheless, would not specify any additional particulars relating to the glasses from the software program developer.
Pokemon Go was launched in July 2016 and has gained huge reputation ever since. It was not like every other Pokemon sport launched earlier than and had hordes of individuals out and about making an attempt to catch Pokemons positioned in real-world places. The sport noticed huge popularity because it grossed $3.6 billion (roughly Rs. 26,300 crores) within the first 4 years of its launch, in line with knowledge by Sensor Tower. Recently, owing to the coronavirus outbreak, Pokemon Go tailored its gameplay to make it extra stay-at-home pleasant. The sport now lets customers nearly meet up with mates for a Pokemon raid and the Adventure Sync function now counts your steps even contained in the confines of your home.
Nintendo and Niantic announced their partnership in growing extra AR-based titles sooner or later. The first of those goes to be a Pikmin-based sport the place customers will information plant-like Pikmin creatures to finish puzzles. Niantic launched its line of AR-based video games with Ingress, a location-based sport that lets customers work together with “portals” which can be near the customers’ real-world location. The sport was first launched in 2012 and bought an replace in 2018 with Ingress Prime that noticed the sport getting higher visuals and new options.
Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast, has a double invoice this week: the OnePlus 9 collection, and Justice League Snyder Cut (beginning at 25:32). Orbital is out there on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever you get your podcasts.