Working 100% in good working condition.

Factory Reset prior to listing.

Played this device with mostly with PCVR titles for around 6 months and never been able to actively use vr after finishing my most played VR Games. The glasses spacer is missing since we never used it anyway.

Minor wear and tear around the foam for the facial interface, but overall did not affect the feel upon wearing the device.

Includes 2x AA battery needed for the controllers.

The box does not include the outer cover that displays details and pictures of the product.

Wiki Description:

Hardware

Its design is similar to the original Oculus Quest, but replacing the black, cloth-covered exterior with white-colored plastic and a black face pad. It is lighter than the first-generation Quest, at 503 grams (17.7 ounces) in comparison to 571 grams (20.1 ounces).[7] The strap was changed to a fabric-based version, rather than the elastic-based strap of the Quest.[8]

The Quest 2 uses the Snapdragon XR2, a system on a chip by Qualcomm. It is a derivative of the Snapdragon 865 that is designed for VR and augmented reality devices.[9][10] It includes 6 GB of LPDDR4X RAM — an increase of 2 GB over the first-generation model.[7]

The dual OLED displays of the first-generation Quest were replaced by a singular, fast-switch LCD panel with a per-eye resolution of 1832×1920, and a refresh rate of up to 120 Hz (an increase from 1440×1600 per-eye at 72 Hz). The display uses striped subpixels rather than a PenTile matrix; this arrangement improves image clarity by reducing the screen-door effect.[11][12] At launch, the display's refresh rate was locked at 72 Hz via software, with 90 Hz mode as an experimental option limited to the home area only. A software update in November 2020 enabled games to run in 90 Hz mode.[7][13][14] In April 2021, an update further added experimental support for 120 Hz mode in games.[3][15]

The headset supports physical interpupillary distance (IPD) adjustment at 58 mm, 63 mm and 68 mm, adjusted by physically moving the lenses into each position.[11]

Software

The Quest 2 runs operating system software based on Android Open Source Project (AOSP) source code. To conduct first-time setup, a smartphone running the Meta Quest app must be used.[16]

An update in February 2021 added support for up to three additional accounts to be logged into a single Quest 2 headset, with the ability for accounts to share purchased software between them.[17] In April 2021, a software update added "Air Link" as an experimental feature, which allows games to be streamed from a PC over Wi-Fi.[3][15] In July 2021, experimental APIs were added to the Passthrough feature to allow for augmented reality features.[18]

The internal operating system was originally based on Android 10 source code. In March 2023, Meta announced that all new Quest apps would be required to target API level 32 (Android 12.1) by June 30.[19]

Controllers[edit]

The Quest 2's Oculus Touch controllers

The included controllers with the Quest 2 are the third generation Oculus Touch controllers. The design of the new controllers was influenced by the original Oculus Rift controllers.[13] Their battery life has also been increased four-fold over the controllers included with the first-generation Quest.