
But it wasn't cracked, and you were able to breathe again.

As it smacked against the floor and landed face down, you cringed, afraid to turn it over and see the cracked screen. Think back to the last time you dropped your smartphone. If you friends can't understand or respect that, then get new friends.The GT hits the road in late 2016 to celebrate the 50th anniversary of Ford GT race cars placing 1-2-3 at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans. I guess that translates to "get confident" and speak up when you see something isn't right/someone is damaging your stuff (even if unintentional). You should have stopped them after the first hit. PC desk? Wall mount the monitor, get wireless peripherals, put your PC somewhere else other than on top of the desk, and swap the desk for a wall-mounted desk that can be folded down and out of the way. Get creative and come up with a solution to prevent this from happening in the future. If you can't, find a different room to play in, or consider a desk that can be folded way/moved out of the way in order to play VR.

Set your Guardian to stationary, or at the very least, at least a couple feet away from anything that can be hit with hands/controllers.

Gorilla Tag was a mistake if you knew you had a small room, and that this could have happened. At no point in your life will anybody respect your stuff more than you. Try using a high-grit (2000 or more, probably) sandpaper.Īlternatively, don't worry about it, because unless it's interfereing with controller tracking, it's just cosmetic damage, and doesn't affect your VR experience, and not worth the effort/further damage you could cause trying to "fix" it.Īlso, don't do VR in your room if you have a small room, or, at the very least, don't let other people play VR in your room with your VR equipment. You need to buff it out/sand it just enough to get the foreign material out.

Paint and/or some other material are embedded into the scratches.
