Unofficially, Vive owners can now install a series of patches dubbed “Revive” to make Oculus Store releases compatible with Vive hardware. The patches are billed as a “proof-of-concept compatibility layer” between the Oculus software development kit and Valve’s OpenVR SDK (used by the Vive headset), and work by “reimplementing functions from the Oculus Runtime and translating them to OpenVR calls.”
So far, specific patches have been released for Lucky’s Tale and Oculus Dreamdeck, each of which must be installed into the game’s specific Windows directory. But as Ars Technica reports, the same patches can also be applied to many other games that use the Unity and Unreal engines. While some games have controller issues, Ars and various other Vive users have reported smooth performance. Just keep in mind that running Oculus games on Vive requires installing the Oculus Runtime, and in turn agreeing with the company’s mildly controversial privacy policies.
The patch adds a new wrinkle to the back-and-forth between Oculus and Valve over VR games and exclusivity. While Oculus owners are free to run Valve’s Steam VR software on their headsets, Vive owners cannot officially run games from the Oculus Store.
Oculus founder Palmer Luckey has previously insinuated that his company is not to blame for the one-way street. “We can only extend our SDK to work with other headsets if the manufacturer allows us to do so,” Luckey wrote on Reddit last month. “It does not take very much imagination to come up with reasons why [Valve and HTC] might not be able or interested.”
Valve, meanwhile, has disputed this notion. “Anything Oculus or other stores need to work with the Vive are documented in the freely available OpenVR APIs,” spokesman Doug Lombardi told Digital Trends last month.
Why this matters: The new patch illustrates that bringing Oculus games to HTC Vive headsets is technically possible, if only by creating a bridge between two competing SDKs, but it’s unclear which party should be responsible for doing this in an official capacity. Besides, Oculus has plenty of other issues on its hands, from much-needed software improvements (like the ability to install Oculus Store games outside of the C: drive) to months-long shipping delays for pre-order customers. Hopefully that means Oculus will leave the unofficial patch alone, even if it may violate the Oculus Home EULA by working around the company’s code-signing checks.