Wheelchairs with Grandma Tour Beijing VR Travel Lets You Stay at Home

Recently, Zhang Wei, a young man from Anhui Province, used a wheelchair to push a 78-year-old grandmother to Beijing. From Tiananmen Square to the Forbidden City, from the plane high-speed rail to the high-end restaurant, all experience it again. Zhang Wei said that her grandmother had two strokes and she could not take care of herself. It was her biggest dream to see Tiananmen Square. “In the past, my grandmother sent me to school. Now I have to take her hand and go where she wants to go most.” The filial piety of the young man is really touching. In fact, with the advent of VR technology, maybe the future is not enough. You can accompany the elderly to travel at home.

The concept of VR+ travel is very hot recently: Zhannadu launches VR content platform travel VR App, eLong has released a number of hotel panoramic videos, air travel hopes to provide a panoramic video experience of the inn, and Huilian Jiejing announced that it has completed more than 4,000 scenic spots in the country. With the panoramic data collection, Dreamcatcher is creating a multiplayer online VR spacetime travel product...

With regard to travel itself, people just want to see more different scenes than local ones. In other words, customers are paying for the experience. In foreign countries, travel companies like Thomas Cook, Qantas Airways and Canada’s Destination BC currently have mature VR travel videos.

Future VR tours can be played with people in real attractions and virtual worlds. Visitors at real attractions wear headsets and can communicate with users in the virtual world through voices. People in different places can meet each other in a “place” and eventually realize “from reality to virtual reality, from virtual reality to reality. "All connections.

The world is so big. I want to see it. Maybe at home there will be enough time and energy to complete this dream. In the future, as technology becomes more user-friendly, VR tourism may be a new trend.