I agree completely. My personal VR sickness isn't like vertigo or sea sickness, which both afflict me in real life acutely.
Maybe it's a due to a lifetime of playing video games (3d since i was 10), but even VR games with weird detached cameras or games not designed for VR which don't really respond to head movement are totally fine for me. There is a cognitive adjustment I make which is manageable and does not make me feel sick.
Having used gearVR with a scratched phone screen for a year and now real Oculus for a few months, I am fairly certain that my particular sickness comes from the strain of my eyes constantly focusing too close or trying to mentally blur obvious pixel artifacts or struggling to focus on fogged up parts of the lens which is causing me to experience a headache which eventually leads to nausea.
Maybe it's a due to a lifetime of playing video games (3d since i was 10), but even VR games with weird detached cameras or games not designed for VR which don't really respond to head movement are totally fine for me. There is a cognitive adjustment I make which is manageable and does not make me feel sick.
Having used gearVR with a scratched phone screen for a year and now real Oculus for a few months, I am fairly certain that my particular sickness comes from the strain of my eyes constantly focusing too close or trying to mentally blur obvious pixel artifacts or struggling to focus on fogged up parts of the lens which is causing me to experience a headache which eventually leads to nausea.