The PSVR2 and Quest 3 are aimed at different buyers. The $399 PSVR2 has the better display, with OLED HDR, plus eye tracking and headset haptics, but it only works tethered to a PlayStation 5. The $599 Quest 3 is fully standalone, needs no console or PC, and has the largest VR game library. If you own a PS5, the PSVR2 is excellent value; if you do not, the Quest 3 is the better all-around headset.
PlayStation VR2
Meta Quest 3
Price
$399 (PS5 required)
$599 (standalone)
Displays
Dual OLED HDR
Dual LCD
Standalone
No, tethered to a PS5
Yes
Eye tracking
Yes (foveated rendering)
No
Controllers
Sense (adaptive triggers + haptics)
Touch Plus
Headset haptics
Yes
No
Mixed reality
Limited
Color passthrough
Game library
Curated console VR
Largest in VR
PC VR
Yes, via official PC adapter
Yes (Link / Air Link)
The one question that decides it: do you own a PS5?
If you already have a PlayStation 5, the PSVR2 at $399 is one of the best values in VR. You plug it in with a single cable and get OLED visuals, eye tracking, and a polished library with no extra hardware to buy. If you do not own a PS5, the math changes completely: adding a console puts you well past the price of a standalone Quest 3 that needs nothing else. For PlayStation households the PSVR2 is the easy pick; for everyone else the Quest 3 is.
OLED and haptics versus standalone freedom
The PSVR2 wins on raw experience tech. Its OLED HDR panels give true blacks that make horror and space games look incredible, the eye tracking enables foveated rendering for sharper visuals where you look, and the headset rumble plus adaptive-trigger controllers add a layer of feedback nothing else has. The Quest 3 counters with freedom: no wires, no console, color mixed reality, and the ability to connect to a PC later. One headset is the better movie-night-grade gaming device; the other is the better everyday VR machine.
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Libraries and the PC option
The Quest 3 has the deeper catalog, because the Quest platform drives most VR development, so new games arrive constantly. The PSVR2 offers a more curated set of high-production console VR titles and a few strong exclusives. Both can double as PC VR headsets: the Quest 3 over Link or Air Link, and the PSVR2 through Sony's official PC adapter, though on PC the PSVR2 gives up eye tracking, HDR, and its haptics.
Who should buy which
Buy the PSVR2 if you own a PS5 and want the best-looking console VR for the money. Buy the Quest 3 if you want a standalone headset that works out of the box with no console or PC, the largest library, and mixed reality. If price is the deciding factor and you want the cheapest good option, look at the best budget VR headsets, and for the full field see our best VR headsets guide.