DPVR unseats HTC as VR headset leader in China in Q2 2017

Palo Alto, Shanghai, Singapore and Reading (UK) – Tuesday, 22 August 2017

DPVR overtook HTC as the top VR headset vendor in China in Q2 2017 by shipping 18,000 headsets, a 30% quarter-on-quarter increase. HTC, whose only product is the HTC Vive basic headset, suffered a 6% sequential decline, shipping 14,000 units. Sony took third place, shipping 9,000 PlayStation VR headsets in the country. According to Canalys estimates, the overall VR headset market in China grew 25% quarter on quarter to reach 80,000 units. Notable vendors, including Pico, 3Glasses and Hypereal, contributed to growth with new product releases.

DPVR ships a variety of VR products, with a strong focus on standalone smart VR headsets, which accounted for 60% of its total shipments in Q2. The company benefited from a better product mix, with the addition of the newly-released E3, a basic VR headset that tethers to a PC.

“The E3’s biggest selling point is its competitive price,” said Canalys Analyst Jason Low. “By dropping the barrier to entry, businesses are now investing more in VR. DPVR is winning contracts from B2B partners, including media content and service providers looking to deliver VR content to customers at home.”

DPVR shipped 7,000 E3s in Q2 2017, though it still trailed behind HTC and Sony in the basic VR headset segment.

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In the second half of the year, Canalys expects the market to move toward smart VR headsets. HTC announced the recruitment of developers for its upcoming smart VR headset during ChinaJoy 2017, an entertainment expo held in Shanghai in July.

“HTC saw the need to quickly launch a standalone headset specifically for the Chinese market to follow the trend early,” said Low. But even as HTC drops the selling price, the current Vive system poses many challenges for both consumer and business adoption due to its complexity and the need for VR-ready PCs. “HTC will regain its top position in China if it produces an appealing standalone headset that is affordable yet capable of providing new use cases for both businesses and consumers.”

China’s consumer market remains challenging, especially for basic VR headsets that need an additional external computing device. But Chinese vendors have identified opportunities that HTC and Sony missed.

“Hypereal, a newcomer to the industry, released the Pano, an affordable headset suitable for VR gaming on the PC, to fill the void caused by the absence of Oculus in China,” said Canalys Research Analyst Mo Jia. “Vendors must lower prices while improving the user experience and content to drive growth and adoption in the consumer market. Pico demonstrated that it is possible to produce an appealing standalone headset while offering a decent VR experience for under CNY2,000 (US$300).”

Canalys estimates that worldwide VR headset shipments reached 800,000 units in Q2 2017, with China accounting for 10% of the market.

VR headset shipment data is taken from Canalys’ Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality Analysis service, which provides quarterly market tracking. Canalys defines a virtual reality headset as a device with a display designed to be worn on the face that immerses the viewer in a virtual world, and it excludes simple viewers, such as Samsung’s Gear VR and Google’s Daydream View. A smart VR headset is a standalone, multi-purpose device that is designed to be worn on the face and not carried, runs an operating system, and can run third-party computing applications. A basic VR headset is a device serving a specific set of purposes that is designed to be worn on the face and not carried, cannot run third-party computing applications independently and is generally tethered by cable to a desktop PC.

This content extract was originally sourced from an external website (Canalys Newsroom) and is the copyright of the external website owner. TelecomTV is not responsible for the content of external websites. Legal Notices

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