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visionOS 26.4 unlocks new ‘foveated streaming’ feature for apps and games

visionOS 26.4 beta 1 debuted today, and in addition to supporting Apple Podcasts’ new video features, the update also unlocks ‘foveated streaming’ for apps and games.

Apple explains benefits of new foveated streaming support in visionOS 26.4

Per Apple’s official visionOS 26.4 release notes: “visionOS 26.4 supports NVIDIA CloudXR with foveated streaming, enabling apps to display high-resolution, low-latency immersive content on Apple Vision Pro.”

That sounds exciting, but what exactly does it mean for users?

In short, it’s a new tool that apps and games can utilize to deliver improved experiences on Apple Vision Pro.

From Apple’s developer documentation:

If you have an existing virtual reality game, experience, or application built for desktop computers or a cloud server, you can stream it to Apple Vision Pro with the Foveated Streaming framework.

Foveated Streaming allows your endpoint to stream high quality content only where necessary based on information about the approximate region where the person is looking, ensuring performance. On Apple Vision Pro, you can also layer native spatial content over the streamed content. For example, a racing game can render the gauges in the interior of the car with RealityKit, and stream the processor-intensive outdoor environment from a remote computer to the device.

Since NVIDIA CloudXR is a third-party technology employed by other VR and computing platforms, the hope is clearly that foveated streaming will allow apps and games to more easily be brought over to Apple Vision Pro.

Beyond this though, the new feature should unlock new experiences inside existing visionOS apps too.

The racing example given above demonstrates that. Here’s another example Apple gives: “a flight simulator app can render a cockpit using RealityKit, and stream a processor-intensive landscape from a remote computer to the device.”

It’s unclear whether any of Apple’s native visionOS apps currently utilize this technology, but hopefully the company leads the way in showing developers best practices.

What’s your takeaway to visionOS 26.4 adding foveated rendering support? Let us know in the comments.

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Avatar for Ryan Christoffel Ryan Christoffel

Ryan got his start in journalism as an Editor at MacStories, where he worked for four years covering Apple news, writing app reviews, and more. For two years he co-hosted the Adapt podcast on Relay FM, which focused entirely on the iPad. As a result, it should come as no surprise that his favorite Apple device is the iPad Pro.