TriOviz Brings 3D To 2D TV At A Very Affordable Price.

Product review TriOviz 3D glasses

Platform Multi

Release Date Out Now. 

Its fair to say that 3D is not going to be a passing fad, it’s also fair to say that due to the costs involved in upgrading to a 3D TV it will remain out of a lot of gamers grasp for quite a while yet, but fear not there is another option open to gamers to get a 3D experience with minimal financial output.

You don’t need a new TV, you don’t need any special updates or expensive glasses. All you need is a pair of TriOviz’s 3D glasses which will set you back a very reasonable €29.99.

If you have got the Game of the year edition of Batman Arkham Asylum then you will more than likely have experienced this method of rendering a 3D image on your standard TV already, but in case you haven’t picked it up yet here is what you’re missing.

How does it work? Well your glasses come with one green tinted lens and one pink lens. The image on screen shows two slightly different images one tinted green one tinted pink. The effect is your eyes pick up the different images and transform them into a 3D image in your brain.

Batman does come with two paper versions of the glasses and while the glasses do indeed work quite well the proper plastic version is far more comfortable for longer gaming sessions.

Already on the list of games on the market that support this 3D rendering is Batman Arkham Asylum and the soon to be released follow up Arkham City. Enslaved also has an option that can be purchased as additional DLC as well as Terra.

The big news from Gamescom was that Gears of War 3 will also be including this option. Blast your way through Locust with a vastly increased sense of depth and vision without experiencing any of the side effect from other 3D experiences. By using natural coloured filters that work with your eye the TriOviz glasses let users play for extended periods without suffering from tired eyes of headaches.

Since I got my first pair I’ve enjoyed a full play through of Arkham Asylum and what you get is a very impressive 3D experience without shelling out a fortune. But it does have some limitations unlike full 3D images don’t jump out at your put rather it turns your TV screen into a 3 dimensional box that the game takes part in.

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