Anyone who’s familiar with me (or has listened to Geekscape Games) knows that I’m a big proponent of VR. I’ve spent the duration of the last few San Diego Comic-Con’s seeking all sorts of different virtual reality experiences, from the American Horror StoryResident Evil VII, or Paranormal Activity: The Lost Soul’ experiences last year (the last link includes a video basically featuring Shane peeing his pants), to The Walking Dead, The Strain, VR Adult Films (for science), and more in years prior.

I was certainly excited to check out more virtual reality at this year’s SDCC, including Archangel, the first release from Skydance Interactive (look out for a piece about this experience later).

FX kept the ‘Mixed Reality’ experience pretty mysterious up until the point that you enter it. The press release gave essentially no info, noting only “Are you prepared to discover the deep power that exists within you? Experience the world of Legion in mixed reality, and see the universe in a whole new light.” Even the employees outside of the experience, when asked, wouldn’t tell you anything about what was in store for you.

No cameras or recording equipment were allowed inside the event, so if you’re interested to see what happened, you’ll have to read on.

Spoilers follow. You’ve been warned.

The outside of the building simply features a classy Legion logo overlaid on top of some vines, while the Mutant Gene Testing for Fox’s next upcoming X-universe series, The Gifted, continually has alarms going off just metres away. A staff member will measure your Pupillary Distance before you approach the event, which I found pretty interesting as I’ve never actually seen this happen outside of a glasses store. Once you get through the lineup, a staff member in a lab coat will bring you into a white hallway with a series of old-looking televisions and a bunch of other convention goers who are currently going through the same ‘testing’ as you are. The actress that was taking me through the experience was very serious, and said things like “Do you remember being here?”, “Do you know who you are?” and “I’m here to help you.” I wasn’t sure if I was supposed to give short answers or freak out like the real David might, so I stuck with the former.

The actress sat me down while another lab coat-donning employee brought me a headset to “help with the testing”. I didn’t realize it until later, but this would be my first experience with Microsoft’s Hololens, which was surprisingly lightweight and comfortable, and produced deep sound that felt as though I was wearing earbuds, without actually putting anything in (or all that near) my ears.

The device took me through a sort of calibration process, which had me looking at a series of triangles to start (which I imagine had something to do with calibrating my field of view), and then lifting my hand, making an “L” gesture, pinching a piece of a floating brain, and dragging it to another location. When I first saw the floating, spinning brain, I couldn’t help but laugh out loud, as it simply felt like magic. The Hololens that you wear is almost like wearing some lightly shaded sunglasses (everything has just a little bit of a darker tint to it), and beyond that, this brain was just floating in front of me before I pinched in with my fingers and, again like magic, moved it somewhere else. This, naturally, felt completely different than my previous VR experiences, in which the idea is typically to put you into the place of another person, in another world. Here, I was seeing all of the same things that I was seeing before donning the headset, and all of a sudden there were things that I could interact with floating in front of me. I couldn’t help but mutter “holy shit” under my breath, and this was just the beginning.

Another actor came out of a room in front of me in order to collect me for a sort of “interview”. I sat down, and in the room the Hololens was adding things like a Newton’ cradle, a stapler, and three face-down cards in front of me, a lamp on a bookcase behind me, a clock on one of the side walls, and a few more things that I can no longer recall. As I moved my head and shifted my body, my perspective on these items changed just as they would in real life. I really don’t know much about the Hololens or how it tracks positions, but I was really impressed here.

I sat down, and all of a sudden could hear voices all around me. I then hear Lenny from the series, who told me to focus on her voice, and told me how I could turn the other voices down (this involved making the motion of twisting an invisible volume knob in front of you. The actor in front of me then began asking me to perform tasks as a mean to learn more about my powers. I started with levitating an item on the table, before stopping the Newton’s cradle by holding my hand out in front of me, and eventually teleporting a lamp from the back wall onto the desk in front of me. These tasks all looked cool, but could be a little confusing as the gestures needed to perform each seemed to vary without explanation. At times I wasn’t sure if I was doing the wrong thing, or if I was doing the right thing and ‘using that power’ was actually just taking awhile. 

The interviewer then asked me to tell him what was on the three cards on the desk. I levitated the cards, when Lenny’s voice was again in my ear, stating that she had taken over the body of the interviewer, and letting me know that these people were not trying to help me, and to go along with what was happening while she figured out how to get me out of there. I “used my powers” to see through the cards and see the symbol on the other side (pieces of the event were also voice activated, so you’d move onto the next card once you said the shape), and read them out loud. 

Lenny (as the interviewer) then asks me to describe what I see in the frames on the wall. The wall art is a series of Rorschach blots, which begin to change and morph when I describe them.

I’m then told to follow her lead (again, this is all in my head, as to not alert the other person in the room), as on the count of three she’s going to get up to guide me out of the office. The interviewer stands up, comes around the table towards me, and it seems like I’m supposed to get up and follow them when all of a sudden I hear something along the lines of “They know!” or “They’re onto us!” and I’m pulled into the corner opposite the door. The other person in the room (the actress that initially took me through the calibration process was now wearing a giant, creepy paper-mâché looking mask and was headed towards me with her arms outstretched. Just as she’s about to reach me, we push through the wall (a secret door) and I’m found in another white room with more lab coat-wearing individuals to help me wrap up.

This is the experience. They help me take off the Hololens and ask me if I had fun (I did). You also have the ability to take a selfie while still wearing the headset to memorialize your (likely) first mixed-reality experience.

Aside from the sometimes clunky interactions with the objects in front of me, I was so freaking impressed by this experience. It reminded me of the first few times I tried (and was blown away by) Virtual Reality, and obviously AR opens up another world of different events, experiences, games, and things that you can do. I can’t wait to see the technology expand (and I imagine that next SDCC there’ll be a myriad of different AR experiences)

Sessions: The Legion Mixed Reality Experience will be open at the FXHibition at the Hilton Bayfront Park through Sunday. The standby line is long, but the experience itself is cool as hell. 

Looks like Fox is interested in getting some of the MCU cash, as just TODAY they’ve announced they are working on two live action adaptions from the X-Men universe.

First up on FX is Legion. Featuring David Haller (Legion), Charles Xavier’s estranged son. Legion first appeared in the late 80’s and was a direct cause of the “Age of Apocalypse” storyline. The show features Noah Hawley (Fargo) as the shows producer. The official blurb from Fox is:

Since he was a teenager, David has struggled with mental illness. Diagnosed as schizophrenic, David has been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for years. But after a strange encounter with a fellow patient, he’s confronted with the possibility that the voices he hears and the visions he sees might be real.

Legion sounds like something right up my alley. Shows that mess with the viewer as much as they mess with the characters in it.

From FOX itself we’re getting HellfireBased off the events from the Hellfire Club, introduced in the early 80’s, the show is said to take place in the late 60’s and will feature a “young special agent who learns that a power-hungry woman with extraordinary abilities is working with a clandestine society of millionaires — known as ‘The Hellfire Club’ — to take over the world.”. It will be interesting to see how this particular show ties in with the X-Men films narrative.

Both shows have Bryan Singer and Jeph Loeb attached as producers.

No word on when principle filming begins or projected air dates, but you KNOW we’ll be sure to let you know.

Another title being relaunched as part of the Marvel NOW! initiative is X-Men Legacy with writer Simon Spurrier (X-Men: Curse of the Mutants – Smoke and Blood) and artist Tan Eng Huat (Punisher) will be the creative team on the series. This series will focus on Xavier’s son Legion rather than Rogue who it has made its central character for years. Check out some excerpts below discussing the direction the book will take.

On the titles new direction:

I’d go so far as to say the title’s historically had a second constant too: a certain focusing of perspective; an earnestness and personality-led truth which comes from experiencing things through the eyes of a single character rather than bouncing between all the members of a team. It’s a more direct narrative POV, essentially. In the past the title has been principally preoccupied with Xavier, then Magneto, then Rogue… Now it’s David’s turn. The whole point of doing things this way is that we get a really unique perspective on the Marvel Universe in general and its mutanty side in particular. I tend to think things take on a richer, more truthful flavour when they’re being processed through a character’s direct filter, and it opens the door (or in David’s case, ha, doors) to a lot of interesting new stories. As for the vibe you identifed – the (literal) legacy of the x-verse – yeah, that’s still hugely important. We’re going to be bumping into a lot of surprising but familiar faces and concepts along the way. Part of my original pitch was to treat one half of David’s tale as if it were a homage to Claremont-era X-Men, then juxtapose and strike sparks off it with the other half. Which I can’t really talk about at all.

Will we see the character teaming up with other X-Men:

Actually, no – sod it – I think I’m probably allowed to say: this isn’t a “team book”. At least, not in the conventional sense — and to start with not at all. Whiiiiiich isn’t to say we won’t have appearances by big, recognisable characters in every episode, because we will. David’s story is very much a part of the X-Universe’s own developing yarn – it’s simply that he’s not going to be wearing a brightly coloured supersuit and having team-up banter. In fact, he’s very aware from the ge tgo that in a certain light the X-Men are kinda obliged to regard him as a villain.

On how Spurrier intends to make a character like Legion a leading character in a title:

I’ve made a few other stylistic choices too, because all too often David’s been treated as a Walking Plot Point rather than a fleshed-out character – it’s vital to reverse that trend. People tend to forget he grew up on Muir Island, so I’m instilling him with a faintly British – even slightly Scottish – accent. It lends itself well to sarcastic sniping, and I’m finding that as I get to know David he’s kinda characterised by a rich vein of black gallows humour. He’s seen so much tragedy and trauma, but he’s witty and sharp and able to force a sad smile in any situation. One snarky sod, basically – although underneath it all he’s the same frightened kid, scared of himself, as ever. Above all he’s a good guy. He wants to help – to matter – to make the world a better place. It’s just that he’s completely conflicted, not to mention constantly facing violent opposition, whenever he tries to figure out how to go about it.

Source: MTV