Although with an AR/VR headset Vision Pro from Apple's workshop, sales are apparently not doing nearly as well as the Californian giant had hoped, according to the sources of the well-informed reporter Mark Gurman, an improvement is planned, which could fundamentally shuffle the cards in this direction. Specifically, Gurman's sources claim that currently Apple is working intensively with Sony in an effort to get PlayStation VR controller support into visionOS.
Currently, visionOS is compatible with classic gamepads from Xbox and PlayStation, but their use is not very good for controlling many AR/VR games. Fortunately, you are Apple realizes, and so, according to Gurman, he should have already approached Sony at the beginning of this year regarding the introduction of support for PSVR 2 controllers in visionOS in an effort to make it more attractive for developers to create VR games for this platform. Sony should have given the nod to this proposal and started working on the support, allowing it to begin Apple even reaching out to developer studios about whether they're willing to introduce it to their pro games Vision Pro support.
However, it seems that there were unspecified problems during the implementation, due to which support has not yet been implemented. Gurman does not even rule out the possibility that the support will eventually be completely swept off the table, but it is not likely at the moment, on the contrary. In fact, the support announcement was only recently scheduled for last month, so the rollout is apparently at an advanced enough stage that the entire plan will eventually be scrapped. When exactly will it be introduced and how is it going with gaming Vision Pro bends but of course we can only guess for now.
I don't know what to do when I can't buy the controllers and people have been throwing PSVR2s in the trash for almost 2 years when I break them. Sony should really be sorry..
Wouldn't it be better to make your own drivers? Or throughout Vision Pro do they have so little confidence that they reach out to the competition and try to use their products rather than invest in developing another hw? The content and usage for the current solution is probably still low.