Apps and Software
Virtual Reality

Meta launches VR subscription service called Quest+

It'll cost you $7.99 a month.
By Stan Schroeder  on 
Meta Quest 3
The upcoming Meta Quest 3 headset (pictured) will be compatible with Meta Quest+. Credit: Meta

With Apple's Vision Pro threatening to take a chunk out of the virtual reality market, Meta is doing its best to entice users to stay in its own VR ecosystem.

On Monday, the company announced the Meta Quest+(opens in a new tab), a VR subscription service that costs $7.99 per month. You can also get it for $59.99 per year, and if you sign up through July 31, you get the first month for $1.

Meta Quest+ works as follows: At the start of each month, users get access to two "hand-picked" VR titles. These titles stay in their collection as long as they remain Quest+ subscribers, so the collection grows each month.

For example, Meta is starting with the Pistol Whip FPS game and the Pixel Ripped 1995 retro adventure game. In August, the company will offer Walkabout Mini Golf together with the Mothergunship:Forge shooter.

According to Meta, the subscription gives users a monthly value of "up to $60," as well as the convenience of a curated experience.

Subscripion-based models have become increasingly popular among IT behemoths recently, with some examples including Apple's gaming subscription service Apple Arcade, Twitter's aggressively marketed Twitter Blue, and Meta's own Meta Verified, a subscription service for Facebook and Instagram. Apple's Vision Pro is far pricier than Meta's Quest headsets and it isn't coming until early next year, but Meta probably wants to lock in as many customers as it can before Apple's VR efforts become competitive with its own.

Meta Quest+ is compatible with Quest 2 and Quest Pro headsets, and it will also work with the upcoming Quest 3 headset, a new, $499 VR headset that's coming later this year.

You can subscribe to Meta Quest+ on the Meta Quest Store(opens in a new tab).

Stan is a Senior Editor at Mashable, where he has worked since 2007. He's got more battery-powered gadgets and band t-shirts than you. He writes about the next groundbreaking thing. Typically, this is a phone, a coin, or a car. His ultimate goal is to know something about everything.


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