A community-developed modification will allow The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild to be played in fully immersive virtual reality on PC, marking a new milestone for one of Nintendo’s most popular titles as the New Year approaches.
The project, known as the Breath of the Wild BetterVR mod, enables six degrees of freedom (6DOF) head tracking and motion controls when the game is run through the Cemu Wii U emulator. The mod is expected to be released publicly on Dec. 30, giving players a way to experience the game in VR despite the absence of official virtual reality support on Nintendo hardware.
According to the developers, the mod supports both first-person and third-person perspectives, allowing players to explore the game’s open world with traditional controls while still using a full VR playspace. As described in the project overview, the game can be experienced with “full motion controls, 6DOF head tracking, and all you would expect from an immersive VR game.”
The VR conversion supports core gameplay mechanics such as combat, paragliding and shield surfing, while remaining compatible with other community mods. The developers said the project is open source and will be made freely available, but emphasized that users must legally acquire and extract their own copy of the game to use it with the emulator.
The team warned that running the game smoothly in VR requires powerful hardware and additional performance mods to achieve frame rates above 60 frames per second, which are critical to avoid motion sickness. They also noted that AMD graphics cards may not be supported at launch due to driver issues, while both Intel and AMD processors have shown stable performance when paired with Nvidia GPUs.
