@rohanpaul_ai: China’s virtual reality shooting game turns shopping malls into a real life play zone Gun controllers with mounted smar…
Summary
China introduces a virtual reality shooting game in shopping malls where players use gun controllers with mounted smartphones to see virtual enemies overlaid on the real mall interior through the camera feed.
View Cached Full Text
Cached at: 06/03/26, 09:47 AM
China’s virtual reality shooting game turns shopping malls into a real life play zone Gun controllers with mounted smartphones for real-time overlays. Virtual enemies + effects overlay directly onto the real mall interior through the device camera feed. https://t.co/mvsdufl6GF
Similar Articles
@rohanpaul_ai: Soldiers + robot dog + drones all moving as 1. China is showing what infantry-tech coordination looks like in operation…
China demonstrates coordinated infantry-tech operations with rifle-mounted robot dogs and drones in a simulated urban combat scenario.
China isn’t just making AI software anymore they are building the hardware to go with it.
China is expanding beyond AI software into exporting integrated hardware packages including robots, smart city infrastructure and large-scale VR/metaverse systems.
@rohanpaul_ai: In Shenzhen China, food glides into your table mid-air, guided by AI. Delivery pods use magnetic levitation, AI routing…
In Shenzhen, China, a new food delivery system uses magnetic levitation and AI routing to deliver food directly to tables, with pods that map space, avoid collisions, and optimize routes in real time.
@AiwithZoaina: SOMEONE JUST KILLED THE REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY A guy scanned an entire house with his phone. Uploaded it. Now anyone on E…
The article highlights the use of 3D Gaussian Splatting technology to create photorealistic, browser-based house tours that eliminate the need for real estate agents and VR hardware. It emphasizes the low cost and open-source nature of the solution built on PlayCanvas.
@rohanpaul_ai: China’s AI race is starting to look less like a model race and more like an adoption race. Alibaba’s Qwen App shows how…
The article analyzes how China's AI strategy is shifting from model capability to widespread adoption, highlighting Alibaba's Qwen App as a workflow-integrated tool embedded in daily professional and consumer tasks. It contrasts this approach with Western focus on standalone research assistants, suggesting diverging AI development tracks between the US and China.