This is VR content
Download DeoVR app to watch in VR

Motion Warning. This video includes abrupt camera movement or other effects. Stop viewing immediately if you feel discomfort.

Gunkanjima Battleship Island in VR. A ruined island registered as a UNESCO World Heritage

Yucca VR
Yucca VR
Released: 9 hours ago
88 views
Passthrough Videos
Get the action happening right at your place with DeoVR passthrough. Open a video in DeoVR app and click

New: AI passthrough!

This amazing Deo feature uses the power of AI to turn every VR scene into AR passthrough! Now you can take characters out of VR and have them right there with you - as if they were in the same room.

Notice: AI Passthrough is presently in beta mode, and as such, users may encounter occasional service imperfections. The feature is currently exclusive to the DeoVR app, but it will soon be accessible on both browsers and mobile devices. Your feedback is highly encouraged and appreciated.

Recommended headsets:

Meta Quest 3, and Quest Pro with stereoscopic color passthrough, Pico 4 (monoscopic color passthrough).

Compatible headsets:

Quest 2, Valve Index (monoscopic black and white passthrough).

Passthrough is not compatible yet for Oculus Link cable.

Share
Embed
X (Twitter)
WhatsApp
Facebook
Reddit
Email
Battleship Island (Gunkanjima), officially known as Hashima, is an uninhabited island located in Nagasaki Prefecture that once flourished as a coal mine. It was nicknamed ``Gunkanjima'' because of its unique warship-like shape.

From the end of the 19th century to the mid-20th century, it rapidly developed as a center of the coal industry, and at its peak, more than 5,000 people lived on this small island. The entire island was covered with high-rise apartment buildings, schools, hospitals, and shopping streets, and it became a symbol of Japan's urbanization at the time. However, with the energy transition, the mine was closed and the island became uninhabited in 1974.

Today, only decaying buildings remain, and the landscape is also known as the "Island of Ruins." In 2015, it was registered as a UNESCO World Heritage Site as a site of Japan's Meiji Industrial Revolution, and has become a popular tourist destination. Gunkanjima's historical value and unique scenery continue to fascinate many people.
Related playlists: All Playlists
Recommendations:
Follow this channel to see all videos by Yucca VR
Don’t miss new videos from your favorite creator - log in and subscribe now