Facebook is Philippinestrying to make VR diverse, and that's admirable. But it's missing an easy way to be even more inclusive, and possibly empowering, with many of its users.
The key: Give users the power to create VR avatars that are body accurate, even if it means they may look fat.
Facebook Spaces, the company's budding social-VR app, is getting a slew of avatar customization options so your cartoonish likenesses can be even more unique and personal. (Yes, this is the same technology that allowed Mark Zuckerberg to make a fool of himself in virtual Puerto Rico.) The new customizations were announced in April ahead of Facebook's F8 developer conference.
SEE ALSO: Facebook Spaces VR avatars kind of look like real people now"Our goal is that everyone can represent themselves in VR in a way that feels natural, so we knew we could do better,” Facebook said in a statement about last week's announcement. “In order to have a meaningful social experience in VR, you need an engaging avatar that represents you and helps you relate to other people in the virtual space. It’s a huge part of feeling like you’re ‘really there’ together."
To that end, Facebook Spaces has added new skin tones, facial features, and accessories to cater to users of a wide variety of races and religions.
Amidst the diversity, however, one thing remains constant. The avatars' bodies are all skinny AF. While you can modify your avatar's body shape, there are limits to how big it can get; everything we've seen in promotional materials has been around the same size, with slight differences in height and bulk.
Facebook has done a good job capturing the diversity of its audience when it comes to their faces and hair. And in the world of avatars, which have been head-only for so long, it's easy to think a person's appearance can be approximated entirely by their face.
But when those heads are connected to necks, torsos, and arms, that's no longer enough. Facebook needs to consider body diversity as well. Facebook's users aren't just diverse in race and ethnicity: They are also more diverse in weight, height, and build than the platform currently allows.
Yes, some chunkier folks might enjoy having their avatar be skinny. On the other hand, some folks may want an avatar that accurately represents their body. And if you're someone who's journeying to lose weight, or gain muscle mass, then changing your avatar to reflect your changing body could be an empowering experience. People will have their own preferences. Let them make the choice.
It's important that companies like Facebook and Bitmoji help their users create attractive, accurate avatars. But it's also important that they not perpetuate Hollywood's myth that skinny is the only way to be.
Facebook Spaces' body-modification tool is a good first step, and I hope it goes further.
UPDATE: May 7, 2018, 4:08 p.m. EDT A previous version of this article said that new avatar customizations were announced at F8. The new features were actually announced in early April ahead of the conference.
Topics Facebook Virtual Reality
Whiting Awards 2017: Jen Beagin, Fiction¡Figaro! 90210, a New Adaptation, Takes Immigrants’ Rights to the OperaWhiting Awards 2017: Phillip B. Williams, PoetryWhiting Awards 2017: James Ijames, DramaIn Memoriam: Bob Silvers’s VisionBest Android Smartphone Battery LifeChances with Wolves and the Lonesome Labor of LivingOur New Spring Issue: Walter Mosley, Elias Khoury, and MoreRemembering Joanne Kyger (1934What Is Poetry For?: Six More Public CasesWhat Does It Mean to Be Smart? Five Koans on IntelligenceWas Jane Austen Poisoned? Let’s Just Pretend…What Is Poetry For?: Six More Public CasesWhen Dreaming Was Mind¡Figaro! 90210, a New Adaptation, Takes Immigrants’ Rights to the OperaThe Victorian Fantasy of the North Pole Was the Opposite of OursMy Dogs Eat Better Than I Do, and I’m Okay with ThatWant a Metaphor for Life? Look to the Struggles of the Switch“Scared Shitless”: The Weird Power of Fecal Intensifiers“Scared Shitless”: The Weird Power of Fecal Intensifiers 'Mario Kart World' Nintendo Direct: 3 takeaways The Amazon Book Sale is coming April 23 through 28 Best Kindle Unlimited deal: Get 3 months of Kindle Unlimited for 99 cents Alienware M16 Gaming Laptop deal: Save $560 Asus VivoWatch 6 AERO measures blood pressure and ECG How to Reboot and Reset Android Devices Best Apple deal: Save $60 on the Apple Watch SE 4GHz CPU Battle: AMD 2nd Best Amazon Fire TV Cube deal: Save $30 at Amazon Useful or Little Known Android Features Best robot vacuum deal: Eufy Omni C20 robot vacuum and mop $300 off at Amazon Japan orders Google to stop alleged antitrust violations Operation Rock Wallaby rains food down on wildlife hurt by bushfires 44 GPU Fortnite Benchmark: The Best Graphics Cards for Playing Battle Royale WhatsApp launches 'Advanced Chat Privacy' to protect sensitive conversations Testing Windows 10 Performance Before and After the Meltdown Flaw Emergency Patch U.N. confirms the ocean is screwed The strangeness of Japan's decision to start openly hunting whales NYT Connections hints and answers for May 2: Tips to solve 'Connections' #691. Best Amazon deal: Get a $5 Amazon credit when you spend $30 on home essentials
2.4261s , 10133.5078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Philippines】,Inspiration Information Network