More often then I ever expected would happen I've found myself sore the next day after getting carried away and playing Beat Saber for an hour or two instead of just 15 minutes. I bought Beat Saber, because it was my intended exercise routine to help me lose weight. Far more fun then I had on PSVR, in part due to better tracking of the controllers. I almost immediately bought Arizona Sunshine again, this time for the Quest. It was everything I dreamed of, and more. And right from the "first steps" app that runs the first time you boot up a Quest I was in love.
After all, that's why I bought a VR capable gaming computer in 2019. I was still happy with PSVR, and I was more interested in PCVR. I initially bought a Quest 1 mostly as a Beat Saber machine, to be honest. And with it, what little social life I had went up in smoke. Then 2020 came in like a wrecking ball that had been vomited on by The Plague from the game Dead by Daylight. There just weren't many games on PSVR that I felt were "must have" titles. The few other games I had were fun, but that was the one I kept going back to.
And of the few I did get, it was mostly Tetris Effect that held my attention in terms of VR. But I didn't feel that compelled to pick up many PSVR apps. And immediately I knew VR was meant for me. Granted, it wasn't until 2019 when I finally got to try VR for myself via Playstation VR. The PBS program Newton's Apple did a segment on the Dactyl VR arcade machine, and it got mentioned once or twice on the news as well. But I first became interested in VR back in the late 80's and early 90's.