I don't think so.
VR isn't about the computers alone. Recently, Sony has sold 35m PlayStation 4 consoles, and will would like to offer a couple of million PlayStation VR headsets to those gamers. Be that as it may, VR's way to the standard might be more about the devices we bear in our pockets: smartphones.
Investigator firm SuperData has anticipated that Sony will burn through $5.1bn on VR hardware and software in 2016, however that the vast majority of this will be on "shabby versatile VR devices" like Google Cardboard, the sub-$30 headset that smartphones space in to.
But then … VR will be about more than games. Zuckerberg, Facebook owner was surely thinking beyond gaming when he reported Facebook's Oculus inclusion.
He wrote -"This is only the beginning, After games, we will make Oculus a platform for some, different encounters, "Envision getting a charge out of a court side seat at an amusement, considering in a classroom of understudies and educators everywhere throughout the world or counseling with a specialist up close and personal – just by putting on goggles in your home.