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Meta Quest 2 — Advanced All-In-One Virtual Reality Headset — 128 GB with Carrying Case and Elite Strap for Enhanced Support and Comfort in VR

  • Based on 75,788 reviews
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Style: Power Bundle


Size: 128GB


Features

  • Meta Quest is for ages 13+. Certain apps, games and experiences may be suitable for a more mature audience. Next-level Hardware - Make every move count with a blazing-fast processor and our highest-resolution display (Packaging may vary)
  • All-In-One Gaming - With backward compatibility, you can explore new titles and old favorites in the expansive Quest content library
  • Premium custom carrying case for Oculus Quest 2 with durable protection
  • Fits the Oculus Quest 2 headset, controllers, charging cable and power adapter
  • Premium rigid hard strap enhances stability and ergonomics while playing, Flexible brace supports your head for longer, more comfortable playtime
  • Ultimate Control - Redesigned Oculus Touch controllers transport your movements directly into VR with intuitive controls

Description

Meta Quest 2 is the all-in-one system that truly sets you free to roam in VR with no wires or cables to limit your experience. A super-fast processor and high-resolution display help to keep your experience smooth and seamless, even as high speed action unfolds around you. 3D positional audio, hand tracking and haptic feedback make virtual worlds feel real. A built-in battery lets you explore further for longer as you discover a growing library of over 350 titles across gaming, social/multiplayer, fitness and entertainment. Incredible social spaces and multiplayer arenas let you meet, play and build communities with people from all over the world. Travel universes in blockbuster fantasies, scare yourself witless in horror adventures or collaborate with colleagues in innovative workspaces. Sit front row with friends and family at movies and live events, find your new workout crew or join quests with fellow adventurers. And you can access over 1,000 titles in the Rift library by connecting your VR headset to a gaming-compatible computer (PC and cable sold separately). Let your friends and family into your VR world by casting your experience to compatible TVs and other screens. And anywhere you go in the real world, you can take your lightweight, portable Meta Quest 2 with you. For ages 13 and up only. Requires mobile device, wifi and companion app for setup. Account registration required.

Specs & Other Info

Specification Details
Cost: Discounted Price from List Price shown
Dimensions: 16.4" x 8.4" x 15.3"
Type: Combined Product Package
Weight: Approximately 4 pounds
Produced by: Meta Quest
Availability since: August 24, 2021

Frequently asked questions

Meta Quest 2 is an advanced all-in-one VR headset. It offers state-of-the-art graphics, fast performance due to its powerful processing, cinematic 3D positional audio and immersive environment with 128GB of storage. It also comes with a carrying case and an elite strap that enhances support and comfort during your Virtual Reality adventures.

No, Meta Quest 2 doesn't require a PC or a console to function. Being all-in-one VR Headset, it performs independently. It uses its in-built processor for computing and the battery for power. However, you can use the Oculus Link cable to connect it to a PC and access even more VR games and experiences.

The Elite Strap is designed to enhance the comfort and support while you use the Meta Quest 2. It provides an ergonomic design that helps balance and stability for longer play sessions. This strap securely holds the headset in place, reducing pressure and movement while in VR.

The Meta Quest 2 VR headset comes with an internal storage capacity of 128 GB for storing games, applications, and digital media. However, it doesn't support expandable storage. So, it's advisable to manage your space well to accommodate your favorite VR content.

Top Amazon Reviews

🚀 Abunda's Overview

This is our summary and key points to consider based on customer reviews.


The product largely garners positive reviews for excellent immersive VR experience, fun entertainment, and promising hours of gaming. However, a few downsides reported include subpar battery life, challenging controls, and a case with a problematic zipper.

Pros

  • 😀 Immersive and fun gaming experience
  • 😎 Great for exercise without realizing it
  • 🤩 Captivating graphics and lengthy entertaining hours

Cons

  • 😞 Poor battery life
  • ⚠️ Controls can be challenging for some users, especially those with coordination difficulties
  • 😟 The case's zipper gets stuck often

Should I Buy It?

If an immersive entertainment device with practical exercise applications is what you desire, this is likely a great fit for you. However, consider your need for better battery life and user-friendliness before making the purchase. In light of the reviews, it's a good buy, but with some potential caveats.


  • A startling, occasionally disquieting virtual reality experience for all
Style: Headset Only Size: 128GB
First, a little background. I'm 73 years old. Above average in the activity department, adept mentally, although I am literally the only person I know who can lose something when standing perfectly still. I have four grandchildren. I hold down a full-time job as a writer, and a once-a-year gig teaching Rio Grande Board Games at the annual World Boardgaming Championships (WBC). It was at the most recent WBC that I was introduced to MetaQuest 2 and in particular, its bundled game called Beat Saber. I'd tried much cheaper VR systems, the ones that hold your phone and you have to download apps to run on them. This was an entirely different ball game. This was, I should note, not a function of the WBC. It just so happened that one of the site administrators had brought the system along with him and one evening, invited me to give it a try. The first issue that one should note is that once you put the headset for this system on, you are pretty much detached from the reality around you. This is fine as long as it's just you and the machine, but you can forget about being outside the machine and trying to instruct someone inside the machine about what's going on. As it happened, the man who introduced me to the system basically set it up for me - put it on his own head, clicked the right buttons - and then transferred the headset to me. With a couple of hand prompts and a word or two, Beat Saber, the program that comes with the MetaQuest 2 when you buy it these days, came on line and there I stood, with two controllers, one in each hand, as my eyes beheld on the screen in front of me, a series of square blocks coming at me, each with an arrow, pointing either up, down, right or left. The controllers operate two light sabers, one in each hand, and the object of this game is to swat the approaching blocks in the direction indicated by the arrow on them. There are also occasional large obstacles coming at you, like skinny walls, which appear like three-dimensional line drawings as they approach. You can't swat these aside and the idea is to avoid them. In most cases, this entails just stepping out of their way, either to the right or the left, but dependent on some choices you make in Beat Saber, some of these objects can be wide and impossible to avoid unless you duck as they approach. No way to jump over them. And there's music. At first, you don't pick up on the idea that your swatting activity with the light sabers can occasionally be rhythmic, linked to the beat of the music. . .Beat Saber. Get it? But you'll pick up on that fairly quickly. If you don't dance and would like to, this is a good program that will force-feed you the concept of moving your body in beat with the rhythm of a song. You don't realize you're dancing because as far as you're concerned, you're swatting colored boxes with virtual reality light sabers. A note of caution. People familiar with the system and how it works will delight in recording video of your attempts to play the game; unbeknowst to you, 'cause you're wrapped up in the headset and can't see anything but what the machine is giving you to see. These people recording you will be LOL-ing themselves breathless, as you contort yourself in a relatively confined space, trying to dodge things and swat at the colored boxes. I made the mistake of failing to heed the warning that if I didn't buy one of these systems soon, its price was going to go up. A lot. And it did. But I bought it anyway and am just beginning to tap into the available free apps and exploring the possibility of buying other ones. There's a free Epic Roller Coaster app, which is fairly enjoyable, although oddly enough, both myself and my wife (now at home with our own MetaQuest 2) found ourselves getting a little queasy during the experience. Not sure what that's about. She NEVER goes on real roller coasters and I do it all the time. Also found a walking-on-a-building-skeleton app that had me God knows how many stories high and though not generally afraid of heights (acrophobia), I wasn't all that keen on walking on the available, skinny steel walkways to approach the edge. I'm in my living room, my mind knowing damn full well that I'm not only not as high as the program makes me think I am, but am, in fact, on solid ground. Yet, in an attempt to approach the edge and have a look OVER the edge, I am literally creeping forward, edging my foot out in front of me, making sure of my balance with each step. My mind absolutely refuses to grasp the concept that I am not in any danger. It should be noted that when you play in virtual reality, the mechanism has you define a space where you are going to be, literally drawing a perimeter line. It's not because the machine is worried you might step off the big building you only think you're on, but when you're playing a game like Beat Saber, you want to make sure that your arm movements don't knock over a lamp your Aunt Ethel gave you for Christmas last year, or in moving your legs around, you don't accidentally kick the screen out of your new Smart TV. I haven't been too excited by any of the first-person shooter kind of apps that are available. That kind of activity never lured me to the various systems that were already on the market. But I did notice and have been on the verge of pulling the trigger on some of the other activities, like table tennis, actual tennis and some other sports activities, like baseball. Am also interested in what is, at present, a small selection of board games, like Tsuro and chess (in a variety of different environments). They offer Catan (originally, Settlers of Catan) and though my interest in board games is strong, I never really liked Catan in real-time, so I'm not going to pick it up in VR. I recommend this system highly. The experience of good VR (and you can buy systems better than the basic one that I purchased) is mind-altering. It's something to which your mind has never been previously exposed; an alternate reality with its own set of rules that takes some getting used to. It's more expensive than pot, but unlike pot, it doesn't just let your head create new connections and free it from everyday anxieties, it creates a reality within your brain that is intriguing to watch, hear and interact with. And as my age indicates, fun for all ages. Oh, and one other cautionary note for those of a certain advanced age. The first time I tried the system, at the WBC, my score at Beat Saber was abysmally low. So I tried again. And again. It wasn't my hand movements with the controllers or the side-stepping away from approaching objects that got to me. It was the ducking at things that I had to let go over my head. I made the crouching moves necessary with reckless abandon. Once, again, and again. My upper thighs complained to me all of the next day. The good news is that it makes for good, healthy exercise. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2022 by Eugene W. Maloney Eugene W. Maloney

  • Excellent VR Headset
Style: Headset Only Size: 128GB
Have had this for almost 3 years now and I really enjoy it. Not only is it an excellent gaming system, but it also lets you exercise. For us senior citizens (65+), it's not always easy to get out to exercise or participate in sports activities. This device lets you do that with many different types of applications. Whether its exercise, sports or game apps, there are many options that will get you moving and working those muscles and joints. I like the tennis, paddleball and ping pong ones myself. There are lots of games and apps that you can do sitting down too. There's a jigsaw puzzle game and a casino game that I really enjoy There's really something for everyone. I did have a problem with one of the controllers, but Meta quickly replaced it for me. Now after 3 years, I'm finding the battery doesn't charge all the way to 100% and it seems to drain faster. Maybe time to upgrade to Quest 3 or 3S? ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 17, 2024 by norm_c

  • So much fun
Style: Headset Only Size: 128GB
I picked this up for my teenage son as a Christmas present. I was a bit concerned about the internet connection, since we live very rural and have only a very, very slow connection. But this works without a problem. The headset is, thanks to the straps, adjustable to a wide range of head sizes. It doesn't pinch the hair or rub or feel uncomfortable. The viewer fits around my younger daughter's head all the way up to my husband's very large one. There is a built-in cushion around the area it rests on the face, which keeps it from rubbing or irritating. The nose area, unfortunately, isn't nearly as 'all fitting' and is rather large. My son does find it sometimes distracting, since he can glimpse a tiny bit of the 'real' world when glancing down. There is also an extra accessories which is placed in the headset for those who wear glasses. I've tried it with and without this extra piece, but didn't have trouble with my glasses either way. The handheld controllers are comfortable in the hand, have buttons which are easy to reach, and work very well. These do have wrist straps, which work very well, too. On to the games and usage! I'm not tech-savvy, so things have to be pretty basic for me to use them. This headset is no problem. It came mostly charged and ready to go. It's pretty self-explanatory with the menus easy to see and use when the visor is on. It took about 2 hours for the installation to download and install...but that's thanks to our very, very, very slow connection. And we found that fast (so that tells you how quick it'd be on 'normal' connections). It took a bit to flip through all of the menu options and included apps to see what is there and what not. We did need to download the games, but this was no problem. There are free ones and variously priced ones, giving something for every direction and budget. Once downloaded, the games work easily with or without internet connection (depending on the game, I assume). We got the basic memory one and it has more than enough space for us. The headset battery usage lasts about 2 to 4 hours, but this depends on what games are being played as well as the screen brightness and such. So, it can vary. The hand controllers, of course, hold longer, but believe it or not, these are NOT rechargeable. They use standard AA. Clear some room space when using this. It does have an awesome mapping out application, which the kids loved to use and roam through the house with. And the games to have the player 'draw' the borders first. Watch flailing arms, though (we did have some accidental whacking of innocent family members going on). It is fun. Tons of fun. Some of my relatives, who tried it out for a few minutes because...who wouldn't?...did experience a bit of a headache after 5 or so minutes of play or had a bit of dizziness. I didn't have a problem nor do my kids, though. I'm glad we picked this up, one for both of my kids at home, and they do play together (they can chat through the headsets and such as well). Oh, and my son has streamed Netflix through it and said that it's an odd experience as well. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 28, 2021 by Tonja Drecker

  • Fun and exciting
Style: Headset Only Size: 128GB
My kids' and whole family love this. It was good for the price and keeps us all entertained.
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2024 by TERESA

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