Emerge, a social virtual connection company, announced the launch of the Emerge Home system: the first product to enable immersive ‘bare-hands’ tactile experiences in the Metaverse.
A recent study from National Research Group, uncovering consumer views of the Metaverse found that the majority are excited about the Metaverse, but 78% of consumers say “when interacting with people virtually, I miss the ability to physically touch and interact with them.” Online, we miss non-verbal cues, sensory experiences, and ways of feeling things together. As virtual worlds become the epicenter of shared social experiences, they still lack a key pillar of our human experience – the ability to use our bare hands to feel, interact, and physically connect with those who matter most to us, our “inner circles”.
The Emerge Home system consists of three components: the Emerge Wave-1 device, the Emerge Home social virtual experience, and the Emerge Home mobile app. The Emerge Wave-1 is a new tabletop device that invites your bare hands to be your controllers. Around the same footprint as a 13″ laptop, it emits sculpted ultrasonic waves that allow users to feel and interact via touch in the virtual world. Through the use of Emerge’s patented technology, the Emerge Wave-1 creates a mid-air field of interaction up to three feet above the device and 120 degrees around it.
“Emerge represents what we hope could be a next paradigm shift in human interaction,” said Sly Lee, Co-CEO and Co-founder of Emerge. “Emerge Home’s goal is to take people beyond the screen and allow them to connect emotionally in a natural way, no matter the distance between them.”
Emerge is building a family of products that makes it possible for users to physically feel tactile experiences with bare hands in a virtual space without the need for gloves, controllers, or any wearables. “Emerge Home is the first step in a broader journey to create a new language of touch in the virtual world,” said Isaac Castro, Co-CEO and Co-founder of Emerge. “We are starting with virtual reality today, and exploring other interfaces in the near future”.