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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.
Check out our complete guide to passthrough and join in the discussion at our busy forum.
Experience the layered waterfalls and moss-draped canyon of Sweet Creek Falls, nestled in Oregon’s Coast Range near Mapleton. Captured with the Antigravity A1 drone and immersive H3VR Ambisonic audio, this video brings you into one of western Oregon’s most enchanting creek corridors — where water, rock, and forest merge into a constant flow of sound and motion.
📍 About Sweet Creek
Sweet Creek flows through a steep, forested ravine before joining the Siuslaw River, eventually reaching the Pacific Ocean. The creek is famous for its chain of waterfalls — including Sweet Creek Falls, Beaver Creek Falls, and multiple smaller cascades — all concentrated within a short stretch of canyon. Dense riparian forest, bigleaf maple, Douglas-fir, and thick moss growth give the area its signature emerald look year-round.
🪶 Human & Natural History
For thousands of years, this region has been home to Coastal Indigenous peoples, including the Siuslaw, who relied on these waterways for fish, travel, and seasonal resources. Later settlement brought logging to surrounding hillsides, but the Sweet Creek corridor itself remained relatively intact due to its steep terrain and constant water flow.
Today, the area is protected as part of a National Recreation Trail, valued for its scenic waterfalls, intact riparian habitat, and accessibility — offering a rare window into old Coast Range creek ecosystems.