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I'm Learning How to (Virtually) Sail on the Meta Quest 3

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This might be the whitest thing I've ever written, but I'm getting into sailing. A friend recently took me on a sail around Santa Barbara, and I finally really understand what Christopher Cross meant when he sang, "The canvas can do miracles. Just you wait and see."

Except I don't know how to do it. So I was just sitting there, not actually sailing. It's personally frustrating to feel useless on the poop deck (It's called a "poop deck," right?), so I downloaded MarineVerse Sailing Club for the Meta Quest 3, and it became my "Upgrade of the Week."

How I learned to sail the (virtual) seas with MarineVerse Sailing Club

The next time I go sailing (which I hope is going to be soon, eh, Doug?), I'm going to be armed with whatever salty seamanship skills one can gain in virtual reality. MarineVerse Sailing Club lets you pilot and race five different crafts, from dinghies to yachts, in exotic VR locations all over the world like fake-Sydney and ersatz-Rio. But more importantly to me, it's a way to learn the basics of sailing: things like the names of parts of the boat, and more advanced boat-biz like tacking, jibing, and right-of-way rules. It features a series of easy-to-follow lessons that are way more interesting and fun than just reading about sailing, and you can take what you learn and face off with others in multiplayer races, or just sail around the virtual seas.

I haven't really gotten into the community aspect of it yet, but Sailing Club has an active userbase of thousands of scalawags, many of whom are real-life sailors, who compete in organized racing leagues and jaw about the sea on Discord, just like a real sailing club. It's the kind of niche community that flourishes in virtual spaces.

The focus is on realism instead of thrills and the graphics are very last-generation, so I don't know if I would recommend Sailing Club strictly as a game, but as a learning tool or cheap fix when you're far from the marina, it's worth $29.99. Even if you throw in the cost of a Meta Quest 3, that's a small fraction of the $10,000 you'd pay for a cheap sailboat.

Obviously, you're only scratching the surface of sailing knowledge with a VR simulation, and the best VR sailing experience is about a two on the awesomeness scale compared to actually floating around in the ocean, but if you're like me, and you don't want to be a total sailing noob, it's a very fun first step. Ahoy!

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