Skip to main content

Jimmy Fallon draws stick figures in 3D while playing VR pictionary

Virtual Reality Pictionary with Andrew Rannells and Michael Che
It may seem like we’re living in the future when late night TV hosts are playing virtual reality games to pass the time, but that’s exactly what’s happening. Perennial goofster Jimmy Fallon, operating an HTC Vive to show off its functionality, played a game of VR pictionary using the ever-versatile Google TiltBrush.

TiltBrush was one of the original games that was given away with the HTC Vive VR headset, and it continues to be a popular choice among gamers and artists alike for the freedom it gives to produce all sorts of wonderful creations. It can also let you draw hard-to-interpret snake charmers, but despite the stick-figure nature of Fallon’s artistic expression, his guests were able to guess his intention all the same.

Recommended Videos

This is one feature that fans of the shows may well become used to in the future, too, if the high-quality living-room set that the Tonight Show prepared for the segment is any indication. We’ll have to see if VR Pictionary becomes a regular feature on the show.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

This sort of game is one that many VR users have played since the HTC Vive was released back in April. Although several games have been built for a party-like environment, where one person dons the headset and others watch, Pictionary-style play in TiltBrush is one that has been used by many a VR host.

As RoadtoVR points out, the unofficial game mode was so popular that TiltBrush developers ended up adding their own spin on the game type, called Tiltasaurus. To play, one person in VR is shown a word that the people in the real world cannot see. It is then that player’s task to draw what the word describes, while the other players guess the word.

The winner takes over the headset, making it a solid little party experience. As Fallon showed with this segment though, with something as freeform as Tiltbrush, you can make up your own games, and all you need is a little imagination. More imagination that writing dirty words in blue light, but that’s about the first thing we all did when we donned the headset for the first time.

This wasn’t Fallon’s first go with a VR headset. He debuted a pre-production and pre-development kit version of the Oculus Rift back in 2013, so he’s been riding the virtual reality hype train for longer than most.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale is a freelance evergreen writer and occasional section coordinator, covering how to guides, best-of lists, and…
LG’s new Gram Pro finally looks like a serious MacBook Pro rival
An LG Gram laptop on a table.

Just ahead of CES, LG has announced a refresh to its Gram Pro lineup, as well as launched a budget-friendly Gram Book. The tweaked Gram Pro laptops are the most exciting, though, with the the LG Gram Pro 17 catching my eye.

First off, it's been thinned out a bit, dropping down to 0.62 inches thick, which is almost the same thickness as the 16-inch MacBook Pro. The LG Gram Pro 17 is also a full pound and a half lighter than the MacBook Pro, both of which are striving to be one of the best laptops you can buy.

Read more
Nvidia’s new GPUs show up in prebuilts, but the RTX 5090 is missing
iBUYPOWER RTX for AI PCs side view of pre-built on sale hero

Nvidia's upcoming RTX 5080 and RTX 5070 Ti just appeared in several iBUYPOWER gaming PCs. This is the first U.S. retailer to list Nvidia's RTX 50-series in prebuilt systems. The listings are interesting, with performance figures that really don't add up. Still, the biggest question is: Where's the GPU that's bound to beat all the current best graphics cards? Yes, we're talking about RTX 5090.

The listings have already been taken down, but they were preserved by VideoCardz. A total of five systems were listed by iBUYPOWER, but they all contained the same two GPUs -- either the RTX 5080 or the RTX 5070 Ti. Both cards are said to come with 16GB of memory, and we expect them to be announced on January 6 during the CES 2025 keynote held by Nvidia's CEO, Jensen Huang.

Read more
OLED gaming monitors are about to get a lot brighter
Path of Exile 2 running on an Asus gaming monitor.

One of the biggest criticisms leveled against OLED monitors, despite being some of the best gaming monitors you can buy, is how dim they are. Although brightness is steadily increasing, it looks like the next crop of OLED gaming monitors will make quite the leap when it comes to HDR performance. Ahead of CES 2025, VESA has revealed a new tier of its DisplayHDR standard that's focused squarely on the brightness of OLED monitors.

The certification is DisplayHDR True Black 1,000. Most OLED gaming monitors, such as the MSI MPG 321URX or Alienware 27 QD-OLED, are certified with DisplayHDR True Black 400. This certification level is reserved for OLED -- or extremely high-end mini-LED -- displays that achieve nearly perfect black levels. According to VESA's specifications, the display has to reach 0.0005 nits with a checkboard pattern. Now, VESA is focusing on the other end of the spectrum, adding a more demanding tier that maintains those low black levels while pushing brightness higher.

Read more