How to Watch VR Porn on Quest 3 — Without Sideloading Anything
You do not need an app, a cable, a PC, or a six-gigabyte download. Put your Quest 3 on, open the built-in Meta Quest Browser, go to deepgoon.com, open any VR video, and press the glowing ENTER VR button in the player. The video goes fully stereoscopic in front of you — each eye gets its own image, so you get real depth rather than a flat picture wrapped around your face. If you are at your computer, press CAST VR instead and scan the QR code with your headset: it hands the exact page across so you do not have to type a URL with a pointer. It streams, so there is nothing stored on the headset. Free to start, 18+, 100% AI-generated.

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What you get
The whole thing, start to finish
- Put the headset on and open the browserThe Meta Quest Browser is already installed on your Quest 3 — it is the plain web browser in your app library. You do not need to install anything, enable developer mode, or sideload a player.
- Go to deepgoon.comType deepgoon.com into the browser and confirm you are over 18. Everything streams from the site itself, so nothing is downloaded to the headset and nothing is stored on it.
- Or send the page over by QR insteadTyping a URL with a hand controller is miserable. If you are already at your computer, open a VR video there and press CAST VR — a QR code appears. Look at it through your headset and it opens the exact same page inside the Quest browser.
- Open a VR-tagged videoPick anything in the catalogue marked as VR. These are the side-by-side stereoscopic scenes, which is the format that produces genuine depth in a headset.
- Press ENTER VRIn the player controls you will see a glowing headset button. Inside a Quest it reads ENTER VR. Press it and the scene opens around you in stereoscopic 3D, with the playback controls floating in front of you. Press EXIT VR to come back out.
Why this is normally such a miserable chore
The standard way to watch VR porn on a Quest goes something like this. Find a scene. Download a file that is six or eight gigabytes. Plug the headset into a computer with a cable. Wait for the transfer. Install a third-party video player from somewhere. Work out whether the file is meant to be 180 or 360, and whether it is over-under or side-by-side, because if you guess wrong the whole thing looks broken. Then finally, forty minutes after you started, watch something.
That is why so many people try VR porn exactly once. The format is genuinely extraordinary and the delivery is a nightmare, and no amount of extraordinary survives a forty-minute setup with a cable in it.
None of that exists here. It is a web page. You open it in the browser that came with the headset, and you press play. The entire chore has been deleted, and what is left is the part that was good.
The QR hand-off, because typing in a headset is awful
There is one genuinely annoying thing about headset browsers, and it is entering a web address. Pointing a controller at a floating keyboard, one letter at a time, is nobody's idea of foreplay.
So the player does it for you. On your computer or your phone, open any VR video and press CAST VR. A QR code appears on screen. Look at it through the headset and the Quest opens that exact page — the right video, already loaded, ready to go. From there you press ENTER VR and you are in.
It is a small thing that removes the last piece of friction between deciding you want to watch something and actually watching it.
What you actually see when you press ENTER VR
The scenes are side-by-side stereoscopic VR180. That means the file carries two slightly different images, one for each of your eyes, exactly as your eyes would have seen the scene had they been there. Your brain fuses them into depth.
This is the whole reason VR is worth the hassle it usually demands. A 360° video with a single flat image is a photograph wrapped around your head — you can look around it, but nothing has volume. Stereoscopic VR180 gives things volume. She has a distance from you, and it changes as she moves.
The playback controls come with you into the session, floating in front of you, so you can pause, seek and adjust without taking the headset off. When you are done, EXIT VR drops you back to the page.
It works on more than a Quest 3
Nothing in this is Quest-specific. The player uses WebXR, the open standard built into modern headset browsers, so the same page works on a Quest 2, a Quest Pro, a Pico, an Apple Vision Pro, and PCVR through a desktop browser. The button appears wherever the headset can support an immersive session.
On a device that cannot do VR — an ordinary laptop or phone — the same button reads CAST VR instead, and hands the page to a headset by QR rather than trying to pretend. That is the only difference between the two.
And because every scene is AI-generated, the catalogue is not limited by what a camera rig can physically be pointed at. There are no performers, no sets and no real people involved at any stage.
The models
See all →Questions, answered
How do I watch VR porn on the Quest 3?
Open the Meta Quest Browser that came with the headset, go to deepgoon.com, open any VR-tagged video, and press the glowing ENTER VR button in the player. The scene opens around you in stereoscopic 3D. There is no app to install and nothing to sideload.
Do I need to sideload anything or install an app?
No. This is the entire point. It runs in the browser that is already on your Quest — no app store, no sideloading, no developer mode, no third-party video player, and no cable to a PC.
Do I have to download the videos?
No, everything streams. Nothing is downloaded to the headset and nothing is stored on it, so you are not waiting on an eight-gigabyte transfer before you can watch anything.
Why does my button say CAST VR instead of ENTER VR?
Because the device you are on cannot open an immersive session — you are on a normal computer or phone rather than in a headset. Press CAST VR and a QR code appears; look at it through your headset and the same page opens in the Quest browser, where the button will read ENTER VR.
Does it work on Quest 2, Pico, or Apple Vision Pro?
Yes. The player uses WebXR, the open standard in modern headset browsers, so it works on Quest 2, Quest Pro, Quest 3, Pico, Apple Vision Pro, and PCVR — anything whose browser supports an immersive session.
Do I need a PC or a cable?
No. The headset streams the video directly over your own wifi. A computer is only ever useful for the optional QR hand-off, and even that is just a convenience so you do not have to type a URL with a controller.
What format are the VR videos?
Side-by-side stereoscopic VR180 — the file carries a separate image for each eye, which is what creates real depth rather than a flat image wrapped around your head.
Is it free?
Yes — start streaming free. You will need to confirm you are over 18.
Are real performers involved?
No. Every scene is 100% AI-generated and fictional. No real people are depicted and no real-person likenesses are used.
Is it 18+?
Yes. DeepGoon is strictly adults-only and every character is depicted as an adult.
More ways to play
Headset on. Press play. That is the whole setup.
18+ only · 100% AI-generated, fictional characters · no real people depicted






