Is Virtual Reality Bad for Your Eyes? What the Research Says

Is virtual reality destroying your retinas? Short answer: No, but it's confusing your brain. The hardware isn't frying your eyeballs with radiation; it's exposing an architectural quirk in how human vision works. Let's put the sensationalism aside and look at the actual optical mechanics.
The Vergence-Accommodation Conflict
When you look at an object in the real world, your eyes do two things simultaneously: they point toward the object (vergence) and they focus their lenses on it (accommodation). In a VR headset, the screen is fixed a couple of inches from your face, but the simulated objects are rendered at varying distances.
Your eyes are forced to converge on a distant virtual mountain while accommodating (focusing) on a screen two inches away. This sensory mismatch is what causes the headache, not "blue light."
Eye Strain
Temporary fatigue from the vergence-accommodation conflict.
Permanent Damage
No clinical evidence suggests VR causes permanent vision loss in healthy adults.
The Verdict
Take the headset off every 30 minutes. Apply the 20-20-20 rule (look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds). Treat VR like sitting too close to a monitor, not staring at the sun.
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