Microsoft HoloLens offers a kind of magic virtual reality can't

Microsoft HoloLens

Someone 10 feet away is pinching furiously at the air, aiming in my direction. To an observer not wearing Microsoft HoloLens, this person might look foolish, even bizarre.

Not to me. I'm pinching at him just as ardently, as well as five other people in a room of more than 50.

RoboRaid

RoboRaid, another HoloLens game

The power of reality

HoloLens, which began shipping to developers last week, is not a virtual reality headset that completely immerses you in a game or experience.

Instead, it overlays digital images onto the real world. You can still see everything in your environment, from couches to tables to computers to people, but if a HoloLens experience is activated, you'll also see things that aren't really there, like vibrant Pollys and prismatic shards as that blue orb is blown up.

HoloLens' mixed reality induces a psychedelic feeling: I'd be having a perfectly normal conversation with my Holographic Academy mentor, but if I looked away or another player walked into my field of view, I'd see their bouncing Polly or the pulsating base. My mentor couldn't see any of this because she wasn't wearing HoloLens, but I could.

The other virtual reality headsets on the market transport you to other places, and all the major ones do this excellently in their own right. HTC Vive, as our Nick Pino describes in his review of the headset, is the best of them all at this.

HoloLens will take you to another planet, like Mars, but what I've found most intriguing during my time with the headset is that it adds magic to the real world. Any room can become something wonderful with mixed reality. Now, to make it even better, Microsoft is throwing in other people.

With most VR experiences I've tried, there's a wall of sorts between myself and what I'm seeing, no matter how real it is, namely because I'm not actually in that world. That wall disintegrates wearing HoloLens.

All the world's a stage, Shakespeare wrote. With HoloLens, all the world's your play thing.

Michelle Fitzsimmons

Michelle was previously a news editor at TechRadar, leading consumer tech news and reviews. Michelle is now a Content Strategist at Facebook.  A versatile, highly effective content writer and skilled editor with a keen eye for detail, Michelle is a collaborative problem solver and covered everything from smartwatches and microprocessors to VR and self-driving cars.