H2L, a Japanese tech firm specialising in virtual reality and body sharing, could be the first to bring real-world pain feeling into the metaverse.
Experience of real-world pain in Metaverse
H2L’s main ‘Bodysharing’ product is a wristband that recognises human muscles and allows a user’s avatar to replicate body movement to feel other persons or items around them. The armband regulates arm muscles through electrical activity, allowing users to feel feelings surrounding their avatar.
As per the company’s Twitter handle, “H2L technology sends weight and resistance sensation to users and avatars on the Metaverse, not merely pain.”
H2L technology conveys weight and resistance feeling to users and avatars on the Metaverse, not only pain. Please read also her interview.
H2L teknolojisi, Metaverse'deki kullanıcılara ve avatarlara sadece acıyı değil, ağırlık ve direnç hissini iletir.@SugiuraEri @FT https://t.co/E3IkPT9oMX
— h2linc (@h2linc) March 21, 2022
Emi Tamaki, CEO and co-founder of H2L, told reporters that feeling pain allows them to make the metaverse world into a real-world environment, with a heightened sense of presence and immersion.
Story of H2L and real-world bodily feelings using computers
Tamaki holds a PhD in engineering from the University of Tokyo and specialises in haptic technology. She chose to research the possibilities of haptic technology with the goal of merging people’s bodily experiences with computers after a near-death experience due to congenital heart disease in her late teens. She told reporters about why she chose to work on a new topic on which no one was doing research after sharing her experience on the realization of the importance of life
After it, Tamaki went on to start H2L, which is currently worth $42 million and has funded $8.4 million for product development. Within the next five years, H2L intends to issue a $168 million initial public offering.