After a month in beta Valve has released SteamVR 2.0 for the headset-wearing masses

By Alex Chen | January 01, 0001

Valve has released jinda44 SteamVR 2.0 after a month in beta. The virtual reality software is finally heading to headsets with some big changes to the store, keyboard, library, and more.

I don't know if you've used SteamVR recently but prior to this release it's not been a piece of software that inspired feelings of 'next-gen' or the 'new way to play games'. While it's seen various bug fixes over the years, it's long felt dated and in serious need of a revamp.

Thankfully SteamVR 2.0 includes a pretty massive overhaul of the interface. It's more like the Steam app or Steam Deck's interface than ever today and much easier to navigate around. As I wrote in my , the best bit is "no longer having to take your headset off every 5 minutes" to use your keyboard and mouse to boot e19 a game or app.

I go into greater detail of all the tweaks and changes in that article, as little has changed with the full release today, but here's a brief overview of what's new from Valve:

  • Most of the current features of Steam and Steam Deck are now part of SteamVR
  • Updated keyboard with support for dual-cursor typing, new languages, emojis, and themes
  • Integration of Steam Chat and Voice Chat
  • Improved Store that puts new and popular VR releases front and center
  • Easy access to Steam notifications

With the changes it finally feels like SteamVR is a part of the Steam ecosystem, not a forgotten relic. Though there's still work to be done: the VR Home screens could do with a [[link]] bit of a spring clean and some tweaks to make them a bit more user-friendly, for one.

While it had looked like all these changes were leading up to some kind of new hardware release, we're yet to hear any more about one. Valve is said to be working on a new VR headset, codename Deckard, but when that shows up is anyone's guess.

In the [[link]] meantime, any headset compatible with SteamVR can benefit from these new changes. That's most of 'em.


: Top chips from Intel and AMD.
: The right boards.
: Your perfect pixel-pusher awaits.
: Get into the game first.

3 Reader Comments

SpinMaster146

Some games are a bit laggy on my phone at times, but the variety of games and the smooth desktop experience make up for it. Overall, the website offers a great gaming experience for both casual and serious players.

TreasureFinder511

I won a small jackpot yesterday and it was really exciting! The thrill of winning real money keeps me coming back. The website feels fair, and payouts are processed promptly, which makes me trust the platform even more.

TreasureFinder31

Website layout is very clean, intuitive, and easy to navigate. I can quickly find my favorite games, access promotions, and check my account details without any confusion. It’s a pleasure to use.

Recommended Reading

Cities_ Skylines and BattleTech developers will announce new games next week

Publisher Paradox Interactive will have an announcement stream next week showing off what their internal and published studios will be up to in 2023, [[link]] including reveals of at least two brand new games ...

Zen 3 is the gift that keeps on giving as it looks like two more X3D CPUs are heading our way

If you're using an [[link]] AM4 motherboard in your gaming PC, then there's some good news for you as it looks like AMD is releasing another eight core chip with 3D V-Cache that should be cheaper than the Ryze...

You get one guess as to what this FPS called KILLBUG is about

The last few years have seen some really good fast-paced arena shooters release, and the latest one I've got for you is KILLBUG. In Killbug, you are the Killbug, and you have to kill [[link]] as many other bug...