You may also want to turn off hand tracking, as that can get really annoying.ĪLMOST WORKING - EASIEST: The easiest way would be to do the same process as above but in the oculus browser. I do recommend keeping your oculus controllers next to you where the headset can see them, so that it continues to track them. Don't know why it wouldn't work to be honest. I presume this works with mouse and keyboard as well, with some combination of bluetooth and/or usb dongled devices, but I don't use those and don't really care to test that. It fullscreens to the size of chrome, which isn't that large, and the latency kind of sucks sometimes, but that should improve as nvidia improved their web based version of geforce now. I have confirmed that it successfully launches games and takes control of a connected xbox controller, allowing you to play any games as usual. Finish, and go back to the first tab, which should recognize you as logged in without needing to reload. Go back by pressing b on your controller, and then turn desktop mode back on, and click nvidia login again. It will end on a page saying that your device is not supported, as chrome turns off desktop mode on most new pages. Press the 3 dots and turn on desktop mode and refresh.
#Geforce now download. install
To do this, you will need to install google chrome, using side quest or using my install method below. WORKING METHOD: due to the improvements made to the web app version of geforce now, I have confirmed that it functions on the quest. Please upvote so others may see this, as far as I know this is the first post with a fully functional method.
Everything below I have confirmed on my quest 2, and would expect it to function the same on a quest 1 I have done some experimenting on geforce now in an attempt to get it working on oculus quest 2.