Two colleagues came and got a little dizzy. I am not prone to dizziness, I can handle frame drops, looking at things up close or forced camera movements by the game. However, I have only tried the Assetto Corsa racing simulator and the micro runs around 40% running alone, it doesn't go below 90 FPS (the Hz of the Oculus). Maximum GPU at 70º and 90%, the fan is around 1K, it's very quiet compared to my 760 which got up to 3K and 80º losing the turbo but which honestly made me manage with the glasses by lowering 4 little things in the game that weren't noticeable. The problem comes with poorly optimized mods and many cars on the track, for this and to get more hardcore games I've dropped the cucumber. If I have to suffer stumbles in the cities with The Witcher 3 so be it, I'm not going to switch platforms xD
They lack some resolution but, I won't go back to monitor at least with racing simulators. It's much more immersive and it's better traced. If cars pass you at 200 and a bit Kms./h while standing still, it gives a lot of speed sensation. If you want to look back or watch rivals in a match, you look in mirrors or to the sides… It's great for aviation/driving, I have to try EVE. The platform games they give away (Lucky's tale) are quite good but, I've already got tired, it's because of the VR nonsense, it's less cool than a Little big planet.
With horror games you can get some good scares xD
They have to let me try GTA, they told me it makes you dizzy with the camera movements, for now I'm going to try other games but I'll let you know.
Let's see if I figure out how to put the VR on the glasses, I've read something about virtual desktops.
Editing: 50% micro and 100% graphics on the VR, 70 FPS in Kaer Morhen, we'll see if it explodes in Novingrado xD