Johntron — Vr
But Jon leans into the jank. Unlike polished streamers who hide the bugs, Jon yells at them. He accuses the headset of being possessed by the ghost of ET for the Atari 2600. He personifies the chaperone grid as "that annoying blue cage."
This honesty is refreshing. In an era where VR marketing is all "immersive wonder," Jon reminds us that VR is also "sweaty goggles, tripping over wires, and accidentally punching your TV." Looking back, Jon’s VR content arrived at a pivotal moment. In 2019-2020, VR was trying to be serious. Half-Life: Alyx was the cinematic masterpiece. Lone Echo was the emotional drama. johntron vr
The moment he stepped onto the plank? His legs turned to jelly. He didn't fall in real life, but he grabbed his desk, screamed "NOPE," and ripped the headset off. It is the single most genuine fear response ever captured on the platform. He later edited the video to include a Skyrim dragon swooping by, just to add insult to injury. Jon loves logic. Boneworks does not love logic. In his video on the physics-based shooter, Jon spent ten minutes trying to put a trash can on a shelf. The physics engine had other plans. The can flew backward, hit him in the virtual face, and killed his character. But Jon leans into the jank
Let’s dive into the pixels, the physics glitches, and the screaming. For years, fans begged Jon to dive into VR. During the "Game Grumps" era and through his iconic solo reviews ( Flex Tape, Starcade, Viking Sagas ), Jon was a purist. He loved the tactile nature of SNES controllers and the absurdity of FMV games. VR, to him, seemed like a gimmick. He personifies the chaperone grid as "that annoying
The beauty of Jontron VR is the internal monologue. He stops mid-swing, looks at his virtual hands, and asks, "Am I the bad guy?" He then answers his own question by using a pool cue as a javelin. It’s lowbrow, it’s silly, but his improv skills turn a tech demo into a character study. Let’s be honest: Jontron’s VR videos are held together by duct tape and hope. You can see the tracking glitches. You can see the moments where his controllers drift into the void. In one famous blooper, he tried to lean on a virtual table in Half-Life: Alyx and face-planted into his carpet.