With a decent gaming PC and Virtual Desktop ($19.99 on the Quest store), you aren't stealing indie Quest developers' lunch money. Instead, you are accessing the open seas of PCVR. Unlike Quest, PCVR doesn't have a walled garden. You can find demos, free mods (like the incredible Half-Life 2 VR mod), and yes—older repacks of games like Skyrim VR or Fallout 4 VR .
Virtual Desktop’s high-quality streaming (Hevc 10-bit, up to 120fps) makes those "acquired" PCVR titles look and play better than native Quest piracy ever could.
Quest developers are often solo or small teams. Pirating Beat Saber or Gorilla Tag natively directly hurts the platform that keeps VR alive. Virtual Desktop allows you to be "platform agnostic." Buy your Quest headset, but play the PCVR stuff however you want. quest piracy virtual desktop
Disclaimer: This blog post discusses the technical capabilities of Virtual Desktop and the reality of software piracy. We do not condone illegal downloading of software currently sold by developers. Support the artists you love.
Look, I’m not a cop. If you are broke, I’d rather you play Half-Life: Alyx via Virtual Desktop and a "backup" than not experience VR at all. But native Quest piracy is different. With a decent gaming PC and Virtual Desktop ($19
Pirating a native Quest game (.APK files) is a hassle. You need developer mode, specific versions, and you often lose cloud saves, multiplayer access, and automatic updates. Worse, you are rolling the dice on malware.
Here is why Virtual Desktop makes PCVR piracy less necessary—and why native Quest piracy is a terrible idea. You can find demos, free mods (like the
Virtual Desktop solves the "I want high-end games for free" problem differently. It doesn't pirate Quest games; it streams PCVR games. And on PC, the "try before you buy" culture is much more established.