Recently, a studio named Dark Corner Studios, combined with Radiant Images, a Los Angeles-based image processing studio, and The Mill Vision, a late vision company, have created the darkest VR experience.
The VR interactive video project called "Mule" is designed to give viewers a sense of life. First, before putting on the head display, the audience needs to select the burial or cremation. Foreign media reporter UpoloadVR experienced this video project and chose to bury it.
Later, he found himself and a woman lying naked in a cheap hotel. At first, he injected drugs and fainted until he was discovered by the hotel's administrator. Then, the protagonist of the video, which is the player who wears the head, went to the autopsy desk. The forensic doctor cleaned up the excessive amount of drugs from his stomach and watched himself "self buried."
The audience was sitting in a well-designed luxury coffin while they were experiencing everything. Putting on his head, the audience became the "I" of the first person perspective. But after all, death is something we don't have a sense of substitution. Therefore, this kind of first-person perspective also has the feeling of a bystander. The audience may choose to withdraw in a bloody, horrific or even disgusting picture. It is this alternation of emotions between “I†and “he†that has brought Mule this video interactive project to an unprecedented experience, as Guy Shelmerdine, the founder of Dark Corner Studios puts it: Bringing audiences to them with VR Places and situations that have never been visited or visited in real life.