Quest owners can use Word in VR, but do you really want to?

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Image: Microsoft

Microsoft’s Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are now available to download for free on Meta’s Quest VR headsets, as reported by Android Central. They appear to be the web versions of the apps, so while there’s a lot that’s very familiar about them, after giving the apps a whirl from inside a Quest 3, I can tell you that the virtual office experience still has a few quirks.

The first hurdle is logging in. While you don’t need a paid Microsoft 365 account, when I opened up Word, I had to log in by typing my long Microsoft account password. (The option to log in with a security key failed when I tried it; the other choices were to log in with a GitHub account or a company account.) Since I don’t have a Bluetooth keyboard lying around, that meant I had to manually type in every single character using the Quest 3’s Touch Plus controllers and the on-screen keyboard.

To make that process easier, I pasted my password into a document on my laptop, blew up the font, and used the Quest 3’s full-color passthrough to see my laptop’s screen as I typed the password into Word in VR. Mixed reality!

Image: Microsoft
It’s nice to be able to move your Word window wherever you want.

Once I got access to Word, I found that Word on Quest looks like, well, Word. But even though it works in VR, it’s not optimized for VR, so I found myself running into a lot of trouble selecting Word’s tiny formatting icons or moving my cursor when I was using the Touch Plus. I spent about 10 minutes typing up a short document, mostly using hand tracking and the Quest on-screen keyboard. While the keyboard worked better than when I last wrote about it, it was still much slower than using even a touchscreen keyboard.

Basically, for the app to be remotely useful for productivity, it seems like you’ll need to pair a Bluetooth mouse and a keyboard. That’s not exactly surprising — physical keyboards are a great way to type things quickly! — but I was hoping for changes to make the app easier to use in VR. My experience was broadly the same in PowerPoint and Excel; good luck trying to select cells in a spreadsheet without a mouse.

Image: Microsoft

If you want to try the apps yourself, you can download them for free from Meta’s Quest marketplace. (Here are links to Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.) The apps are compatible with the Quest, Quest 2, Quest 3, and Quest Pro.

Microsoft and Meta announced in 2022 that Office apps, Teams, Windows, and Xbox Cloud Gaming would be coming to Quest headsets, and the Xbox Cloud Gaming app launched this week. Microsoft is also working to bring Word, Excel, and Teams to Apple’s Vision Pro.

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Quest owners can use Word in VR, but do you really want to?

Image: Microsoft

Microsoft’s Word, Excel, and PowerPoint are now available to download for free on Meta’s Quest VR headsets, as reported by Android Central. They appear to be the web versions of the apps, so while there’s a lot that’s very familiar about them, after giving the apps a whirl from inside a Quest 3, I can tell you that the virtual office experience still has a few quirks.

The first hurdle is logging in. While you don’t need a paid Microsoft 365 account, when I opened up Word, I had to log in by typing my long Microsoft account password. (The option to log in with a security key failed when I tried it; the other choices were to log in with a GitHub account or a company account.) Since I don’t have a Bluetooth keyboard lying around, that meant I had to manually type in every single character using the Quest 3’s Touch Plus controllers and the on-screen keyboard.

To make that process easier, I pasted my password into a document on my laptop, blew up the font, and used the Quest 3’s full-color passthrough to see my laptop’s screen as I typed the password into Word in VR. Mixed reality!

Image: Microsoft
It’s nice to be able to move your Word window wherever you want.

Once I got access to Word, I found that Word on Quest looks like, well, Word. But even though it works in VR, it’s not optimized for VR, so I found myself running into a lot of trouble selecting Word’s tiny formatting icons or moving my cursor when I was using the Touch Plus. I spent about 10 minutes typing up a short document, mostly using hand tracking and the Quest on-screen keyboard. While the keyboard worked better than when I last wrote about it, it was still much slower than using even a touchscreen keyboard.

Basically, for the app to be remotely useful for productivity, it seems like you’ll need to pair a Bluetooth mouse and a keyboard. That’s not exactly surprising — physical keyboards are a great way to type things quickly! — but I was hoping for changes to make the app easier to use in VR. My experience was broadly the same in PowerPoint and Excel; good luck trying to select cells in a spreadsheet without a mouse.

Image: Microsoft

If you want to try the apps yourself, you can download them for free from Meta’s Quest marketplace. (Here are links to Word, Excel, and PowerPoint.) The apps are compatible with the Quest, Quest 2, Quest 3, and Quest Pro.

Microsoft and Meta announced in 2022 that Office apps, Teams, Windows, and Xbox Cloud Gaming would be coming to Quest headsets, and the Xbox Cloud Gaming app launched this week. Microsoft is also working to bring Word, Excel, and Teams to Apple’s Vision Pro.

Disclaimer

We strive to uphold the highest ethical standards in all of our reporting and coverage. We StartupNews.fyi want to be transparent with our readers about any potential conflicts of interest that may arise in our work. It’s possible that some of the investors we feature may have connections to other businesses, including competitors or companies we write about. However, we want to assure our readers that this will not have any impact on the integrity or impartiality of our reporting. We are committed to delivering accurate, unbiased news and information to our audience, and we will continue to uphold our ethics and principles in all of our work. Thank you for your trust and support.

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