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  2. Digital theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_theatre

    Digital theatre is primarily identified by the coexistence of "live" performers and digital media in the same unbroken(1) space with a co-present audience. In addition to the necessity that its performance must be simultaneously "live" and digital, the event's secondary characteristics are that its content should retain some recognizable theatre roles (through limiting the level of ...

  3. Interactive theatre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interactive_theatre

    Interactive theatre often goes hand in hand with immersive theatre, which brings the audience into the same playing space as the performers. They may be asked to hold props, supply performance suggestions (as in improvisational theatre ), share the action's real-world (non-theatrical) setting (as in site-specific theatre and immersive theatre ...

  4. Immersive theater - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immersive_theater

    Virtual reality in immersive theater consists of traditional story and filmic elements: plot, conflict, protagonist, antagonist. [16] Virtual reality is a new way of establishing the protagonist. Users can customize the protagonist in detail and make the different decisions they think best for the plotline.

  5. 360-degree video - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/360-degree_video

    The use of the term "virtual reality" to describe 360-degree video has been disputed, as VR typically refers to interactive experiences wherein the viewer's motions can be tracked to allow real-time interactions within a virtual environment, with orientation and position tracking. In 360-degree video, the locations of viewers are fixed, viewers ...

  6. Entertainment technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Entertainment_technology

    This is a virtual reality example, which is part of entertainment technology. Entertainment technology is the discipline of using manufactured or created components to enhance or make possible any sort of entertainment experience. Because entertainment categories are so broad, and because entertainment models the world in many ways, the types ...

  7. On-set virtual production - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/On-set_virtual_production

    OSVP can be viewed as an application of extended reality. OSVP contrasts with virtual studio technology, in which a green screen backdrop surrounds the set, and the virtual surroundings are composited into the green screen plate downstream from the camera, in that in OSVP the virtual world surrounding the set is visible to the camera, actors ...

  8. Virtual concert - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virtual_concert

    A virtual concert, also called V-concert or virtual live, refers to a performance in which the performers are represented by virtual avatars. Virtual concerts can take place in real life, where digital representations of the performers are projected in on stage, or within fully digital virtual worlds .

  9. Cinematic virtual reality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinematic_virtual_reality

    Cinematic virtual reality (Cine-VR) is an immersive experience where the audience can look around in 360 degrees while hearing spatialized audio specifically designed to reinforce the belief that the audience is actually in the virtual environment rather than watching it on a two-dimensional screen. [1]