Japan - Powersoft’s compact transducer, Mover, and its Quattrocanali and Duecanali amplifiers play a key role in The Moon Cruise, an innovative VR installation in Tokyo that takes visitors on an immersive journey to the moon.
The Moon Cruise opened its doors to the public in November. It offers visitors an unforgettable immersive VR journey to the moon, a view of Earth from space, and the opportunity to walk on the lunar surface and take photos that they can download as souvenirs.
"The Moon Cruise is a free-roaming VR experience permanently installed in a new space experience facility themed around space travel called Space Travelium TeNQ. The space entertainment facility has permanent and special exhibits, as well as workshops to provide visitors with a single world-view learning experience,” says Tsuyoshi Nomura, executive officer at Styly Inc., in charge of designing the experience.
Styly Inc. was tasked with an ambitious brief to create a VR experience that simulates the universe, all within the existing architecture. “The area we oversaw is a permanently installed, free-roaming VR experience. There are many event-style virtual reality environments, but nothing like this has been permanently installed on such a large scale,” says Nomura.
Integrated by Audio Visual Communications, the installation simulates a rocket launch and a lunar exploration. “It transforms a limited physical space into boundless virtual environments,” says Ken Yamada, deputy general manager at Audio Visual Communications. “The rocket launch scene, powered by Powersoft Mover transducers and the Quattrocanali and Duecanali amplifiers, combines sound vibration and VR visuals for an unforgettable sensory experience.”
“Our goal was to provide a realistic experience and surprise visitors,” says Yamada. However, creating a convincing rocket launch experience in a confined and low-maintenance environment originally posed some challenges. According to Nomura, traditional large-scale motion platforms were impractical due to their size, maintenance requirements and safety concerns. “It was necessary to take a different approach, and we achieved both goals by designing new, easy-to-maintain fixtures and combining them with Mover.”
Powersoft’s compact Mover is a patented low-frequency direct-drive/tactile transducer adaptable for various purposes. It lets audiences feel the sound through haptic perception by vibrating the surrounding environment, which the human body picks up, and through bone conduction, stimulates the inner ear, translating the vibrations into perceivable frequencies. Yamada explains that the “Mover’s compact design, flexibility, ease of installation, and impressive power” made it the ideal solution for this installation.
To provide a synchronised sensory experience for the rocket launch, five Mover ID transducers are installed into bench seats, delivering powerful vibrations and replicating the low frequency from the BEC IC-120 speakers to create a cohesive audio-tactile effect. MoverIDs are powered by Quattrocanali 1204 DSP and Duecanali 804 DSP amplifiers, provided by Audiobrains, Powersoft’s Japanese distributor. This setup ensures a realistic rocket launch experience by combining audio and tactile feedback with virtual reality content to create an immersive journey to the moon.
For the content design, Nomura emphasised the importance of the journey visitors take on foot to their destination. “The narrative centres around travelling to the moon, focusing particularly on the path to the lunar surface. By emphasising the impact and experience at the departure point, it makes the visual-only walking on the lunar surface afterward feel more realistic.
Nomura concludes: “With Mover we were able to provide the best experience possible and combined with the content design, we achieved our client’s initial request.”