Virtual Reality porn is not like normal porn (obviously). So, porn companies now have to think a little differently about how they shoot footage. (NSFW warning!)
Wired recently spoke to Kink.com about how they shooting VR porn, and itās a fascinating watch:
The video goes into more detail about the differences between normal porn and virtual reality porn, but broadly speaking:
VR porn has fewer cuts, because the idea is to make it look realisticāand actual sex doesnāt really come with all sorts of different viewpoints and angles. Itās all first-person.
Performers have to stand back a lot in VR porn, so that the camera gets a better view. The women in the video say that holding positions is more difficult because of this.
Performers say VR brings a new level of vulnerability, because itās much harder to hide flaws when a viewer potentially has a 360 degree view.
Hereās the the camera they use to shoot VR porn. Really, itās seven GoPro cameras bundled into a single rig. They weave all the footage together in post production.
Once the footage is captured, a program maps the clips onto a dome, which is how one can then look around on a VR headset.
Mashable dives even deeper into a lot of these issues in a piece titled āVirtual reality porn is here,ā and itās also worth a read. Hereās the author, Chelsea Stark, on the difficulties of filming certain positions while in VR:
Videos that focus on point-of-view experience also suffer from position restriction; you canāt perform a lot of popular sex acts, because doing so might give you motion sickness. If the camera is moving in VR, but your head is standing still, the effect on the inner ear is pretty much instant nausea. In practical porn terms, that means āgoodbye, doggie style.ā
And hereās a performerās take on filming VR porn:
āFilming a scene for VR is a lot more physically challenging because the male performer canāt really move, so most of the performance is up to me. It can also feel a bit awkward at times because he canāt talk, so itās like Iām talking dirty to myself,ā she said. āThe male performer canāt say anything back to me or say anything at all. Iād say it just feels a little unnatural.ā
Sounds kind of uncomfortable, yeah? But, the performer says the end product is worth it, so there you go.