
60-Hour Dance Sessions, Simulated Sex, and Ketamine: Inside the World of Hardcore VR Ravers
May 5, 2025 7:00 AM VR Clubbing has exploded since Covid-19 lockdowns, with enthusiasts doing drugs and finding friends and love in an inclusive environment. But some say the convenience is making it harder to control their vices. Photo-Illustration:It was one of O'Rourke's first times doing drugs, but he didn't hold back. Armed with cannabis edibles, cocaine, ketamine, and booze he partied for nearly 12 nights consecutively last August, during which time he claims to have raved for 60 hours straight—all without ever leaving his apartment. (He did take bathroom breaks and managed to eat a steak.) In the last 18 months, the 38-year-old IT worker from Dublin, who did not want his first name used due to privacy reasons, has partied on virtual reality platform VRChat every weekend, often staying up until 8 am, suited up in VR goggles and a full set of motion trackers.
'There's a lot of weird shit going on and it can be hard to adjust, but if you do it's magical,' he tells WIRED. ' If you're not able to self-moderate and police yourself, it's endless. You're not going to win, you're not going to see the end of the party.' O'Rourke is one of many who may struggle with the fantastical, escapist allure of having access to a nearly non-stop wild metaverse party from the comfort of their own homes. Especially when he normally doesn't have plans with friends in the real world.
Before Covid-19 lockdowns, there had barely ever been more than 20,000 concurrent users on VRChat—but its popularity has since exploded. More than 130,000 people locked into VRChat on New Year's Day this year, according to a VR culture blog, and there are dozens of weekly VR parties thanks to organizers across the US, Europe and Asia. Once inside the VRChat metaverse, users—who describe it to WIRED as an immersive, futuristic utopia—can choose which 'maps,' or parties, they wish to explore in the form of their avatars.
VR raving has grown exponentially in the last few years. Photograph: @SushiFerret
And traditional clubs in the US and the UK are closing at an alarming rate— casualties of rising costs, lower profits, and, in places, onerous regulations around noise levels, security requirements and closing times. The infinite amount of space available on VR, plus the lack of regulation, allows creators to blissfully ignore the economic pressures that limit nightlife in many places today. VR venues don't charge cover, so the main cost is VR hardware, which can exceed $5,000 with a high quality gaming PC and full body tracking devices, although a simpler set-up only with a Meta Quest headset can be procured for as little as $350. There are, however, often long lines to get into the most popular virtual club nights, since they are all capped to 80 people each due to the limits of the software on the VRChat platform, which is available through host Steam.
WIRED spoke to 12 people who are engrossed in the scene, from trans people who feel safer partying in VR to introverts and seniors who find it more welcoming. It's even spawning underground VR sex and drug subcultures, with erotic club nights and venues meant to mimic the effect of psychedelics; O'Rourke and other enthusiasts say they've clocked up drug-fueled marathon dance sessions all without many of the stressors of traditional club nights.
'Because of the headset, you don't realize how drunk you are till you take it off.'
O'Rourke, an introvert who is self-conscious about his 5-foot-4 height, co-runs a party called Euro-Corp, which resembles a traditional club space, with a narrow, wooden-looking dancefloor and a DJ booth overlooking it all. He says he is putting in so many hours—almost 1,800 at the time of writing—because he feels now is the 'high water mark moment' for the scene. 'When people look back in 10 or 20 years, they'll say now was its peak. That's why I'm partying so hard.'
But he admits he overdoes it sometimes. 'I accidentally did a heroic dose [of mushrooms] and it was a bit of a mess,' he says of the March 2024 trip during which he could not distinguish between his hallucinations and the VR world. 'I haven't taken shrooms since because it was a bit heavy.' Since then, he's decided ketamine 'synergizes most with VR' because it enhance the levels of immersion to render the virtual reality more real.
Others, like Heelix, a 61-year-old VR DJ from Berlin who has spent nearly 5,000 hours—the equivalent of 200 days— in VR, struggle to control their drinking. 'I think it's a little bit dangerous,' he says. 'I've seen people going overboard and [their avatars] suddenly disappearing.' Another VR party promoter says: 'Because of the headset, you don't realize how drunk you are till you take it off.' One partier says he's has had friends who have needed their stomachs to be pumped after marathon drinking sessions on VRChat.
But socially awkward individuals, homebodies, and LGBT people tell WIRED that VR raves are secure and surreal spaces where, through their avatars, folks can metamorphose into whatever form they wish.
'Go listen to your local people and then come to any random club in VR, you're going to be shocked that your local DJs suck ass.'
Ru, a trans woman from rural Ohio who works as a hospice nurse, says VRChat provides her a safer environment than she might find in real life. 'I get sexually assaulted far less often,' says Ru, 48, who didn't want to use her real name for professional reasons. 'I'm a trans woman, and I live in the middle of a red state. Sometimes you don't want to go to that local place and deal with all of that shit.' Plus, she says that the music that DJs on VRChat play is just better than at the clubs in Ohio she has been to. 'The music is unbelievable,' she says. 'Go listen to your local people and then come to any random club in VR, you're going to be shocked that your local DJs suck ass.' Ru's virtual club, Kaleidosky, looks like the inside of a shape-shifting kaleidoscope, bending the laws of physics with all the fractal visions of a DMT trip. Her VR success as a DJ has even led her to play physical shows in Japan, although she was not the headliner. 'My life has been expanded in ways that I can hardly relate to you,' she says, 'all because of VR and how it brings all these different, immensely creative people together.'
Luna, a VR raver from the Netherlands, was suffering from poor mental health, she was unemployed and felt socially alienated when she first went on VRChat at the age of 19 in 2022. 'I was really depressed,' she recalls. 'I didn't have work, I didn't have real friends, I was stuck at home.' But, like many before her, discovering raving changed everything. 'It was like a way to experience new things, new worlds,' she says. 'I loved it instantly.' She has partied so hard from her living room, her neighbors have complained. 'I can dance quite wildly.'
Just like she would in the physical world, Luna developed an entire group of friends from VR rave encounters. They now pre-drink together before heading out at the weekends in VR, and sometimes they even take MDMA as a group, from their individual silos. Her first trip came in her first few months VR raving, when a friend of hers in Australia said she was going to take the euphoria-inducing drug, and fellow raver Benji, who also lives in the Netherlands, offered to mail a dose of a legal version of MDMA to her house. Later, at an in-person rave organized by a VR club, she connected with Benji; they've now been a couple for two and a half years, and he now goes on VR far less.
But others get hooked on the platform's rave scene, even though the experience cannot fully replicate the neurochemical correlates of a real rave, says neuroscientist Dr Maria Balaet, from Imperial College London. Prolonged drug use in VR could also amplify sensory overload and cognitive fatigue, raising the risk of dissociation and having a bad trip, she warns. 'Having a bad trip in VR is probably worse than a bad trip outside of VR because once one comes out of the VR environment their body and mind needs to re-adjust to the world too, and that is taxing in addition to the bad trip itself.' She adds that drug use in VR could bring about a 'false outward experience' in which an individual has an inner experience in an artificially designed context. 'I am not sure how long one can stay in this state without feeling disconnected or disoriented,' Balaet cautions.
Some VR ravers say they've found real-life partners and friends through virtual partying. Photograph: @ayase_
Benji and Luna first connected romantically in person, but sometimes one thing can lead to another on VRChat — with or without drugs. Through the use of VR rooms and custom avatars with adult capabilities, clothing can be removed to and enable certain 'gestures' to be performed to simulate sex. The explicit phenomenon, tucked away in private metaverse spaces, has spawned whole categories of pornographic videos on adult websites, where VR users record themselves having sex. 'When people engage in ERP [erotic role-play], they typically pick out an avatar to dress the part,' according to an explainer video on how people 'do it' in VRChat. 'There's special physics for body parts that can be added to avatars, as well as 'collision', so that other users can interact with them.' This is against VRChat's terms of service that prohibit creating pornographic content, and these sorts of avatars should be swiftly banned if they are active in a public world.
Heelix's avatar is a young female anime character, and he describes how loneliness led him to find solace in VR, where he plays shows as a DJ. 'All of my friends are old and they don't go clubbing anymore,' he says. On the occasions he has gone out by himself he has felt conscious of his greying hair and growing belly. 'But here in VR I know a lot of people,' he says. 'It's much easier.' Plus, 'the way home is very short' and en route he can even stop by places like one of VRChat's sex-positive clubs, PSHQ—originally known as Pussy Squad Headquarters—where as many as 20 lap dancers can be tipped during exotic dance nights, and attendees can slope off to a 'motel' area for what the club describes as 'NSFW activities'.
Some erotic dancers, like Lichbait, have even developed popular online personas and are profiting from subscriptions, like a VR OnlyFans. PSHQ, according to its creator DeityAnubis, who did not want to be named for privacy reasons, is 'a sexually positive adult space with a focus on music. The music, the dancing, the lighting, the atmosphere, the sense of community, the LGBTQ safe space, those are the important parts of PSHQ and make us what we are.'
In January, VRChat introduced age verification on the platform to ensure children were not accessing certain adult spaces, after a BBC investigation found children were able to enter VR strip clubs and could be cajoled into performing virtual sex acts. Zeus Tipado, a PhD candidate researching neuroscience at the University of Maastricht, describes VR as a mammoth social experiment, but it's one that he has increasing concerns over. Some frequent users get progressively less interested in base reality, to a far greater extent than traditional gamers, he warns. The site's anonymity also provides cover for racist or bigoted behaviour.
During one of his forays into VRChat, Tipado says he was part of a group invited into a man's apartment. 'It was a vibey apartment,' Tipado recalls. 'Everyone was watching Power Rangers, I found a nice place to sit down on the sofa. And then this guy comes up in front of everybody and tells people to take off their clothes.' Nobody took off their virtual clothes and they were soon kicked out of his apartment for failing to comply with the request.
User safety is a top priority, a VRChat spokesperson tells WIRED, and the platform has provided users with a number of tools to protect themselves, such as making it easy to block and report others. 'When our trust and safety team receives a report, they have the ability to use metadata and logs to track down and ban problematic users,' they said.
While many might assume that all VR users are on a quest to escape reality, sometimes the parties act as a gateway to live events.
Promoter James Campbell, who runs the popular Shelter map, has held events in New York, San Diego and Los Angeles playing dubstep, bass and other electronic music genres to bring VR ravers together.
At Shelter's first party, in New York, attended by more than 250 people in May 2022 at the now-closed VRWorld in Midtown Manhattan, he says countless people came up to him and said it was their first ever actual rave, telling him: 'I didn't think I'd ever have the confidence to come to a show.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
39 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Wordle hints today for #1,453: Clues and answer for Wednesday, June 11
Hey, there! We've reached the midway point of the week and summer Friday (at least for those of us north of the Equator) is edging closer. In the meantime, we're got some games of Wordle to conquer to keep our streaks going. Here's our daily Wordle guide with some hints and the answer for Wednesday's puzzle (#1,453). It may be that you're a Wordle newcomer and you're not completely sure how to play the game. We're here to help with that too. Wordle is a deceptively simple daily word game that first emerged in 2021. The gist is that there is one five-letter word to deduce every day by process of elimination. The daily word is the same for everyone. Wordle blew up in popularity in late 2021 after creator Josh Wardle made it easy for players to share an emoji-based grid with their friends and followers that detailed how they fared each day. The game's success spurred dozens of clones across a swathe of categories and formats. The New York Times purchased Wordle in early 2022 for an undisclosed sum. The publication said that players collectively played Wordle 5.3 billion times in 2024. So, it's little surprise that Wordle is one of the best online games and puzzles you can play daily. To start playing Wordle, you simply need to enter one five-letter word. The game will tell you how close you are to that day's secret word by highlighting letters that are in the correct position in green. Letters that appear in the word but aren't in the right spot will be highlighted in yellow. If you guess any letters that are not in the secret word, the game will gray those out on the virtual keyboard. However, you can still use those letters in subsequent guesses. You'll only have six guesses to find each day's word, though you still can use grayed-out letters to help narrow things down. It's also worth remembering that letters can appear in the secret word more than once. Wordle is free to play on the NYT's website and apps, as well as on Meta Quest headsets and Discord. The game refreshes at midnight local time. If you log into a New York Times account, you can track your stats, including the all-important win streak. If you have a NYT subscription that includes full access to the publication's games, you don't have to stop after a single round of Wordle. You'll have access to an archive of more than 1,400 previous Wordle games. So if you're a relative newcomer, you'll be able to go back and catch up on previous editions. In addition, paid NYT Games members have access to a tool called the Wordle Bot. This can tell you how well you performed at each day's game. Before today's Wordle hints, here are the answers to recent puzzles that you may have missed: Yesterday's Wordle answer for Tuesday, June 10 — TAFFY Monday, June 9 — BOARD Sunday, June 8 — LEASE Saturday, June 7 — REUSE Friday, June 6 — EDIFY Every day, we'll try to make Wordle a little easier for you. First, we'll offer a hint that describes the meaning of the word or how it might be used in a phrase or sentence. We'll also tell you if there are any double (or even triple) letters in the word. In case you still haven't quite figured it out by that point, we'll then provide the first letter of the word. Those who are still stumped after that can continue on to find out the answer for today's Wordle. This should go without saying, but make sure to scroll slowly. Spoilers are ahead. Here is a hint for today's Wordle answer: A type of checkered cloth that many shirts and skirts are made from. There are no repeated letters in today's Wordle answer. The first letter of today's Wordle answer is P. This is your final warning before we reveal today's Wordle answer. No take-backs. Don't blame us if you happen to scroll too far and accidentally spoil the game for yourself. What is today's Wordle? Today's Wordle answer is... PLAID Not to worry if you didn't figure out today's Wordle word. If you made it this far down the page, hopefully you at least kept your streak going. And, hey: there's always another game tomorrow.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Brooklyn Beckham Knew He Wanted to Marry Nicola Peltz-Beckham After Three Months of Dating
Brooklyn Beckham was confident that Nicola Peltz was the woman he wanted to spend the rest of his life with early on in their relationship. The A-list couple sat down for an interview with Glamour Germany — translated from German to English — published on Monday, June 2, and discussed their whirlwind romance. Brooklyn, 26, revealed that he would have liked to propose to his sweetheart even sooner than he did. 'We got engaged after six months. But Brooklyn had the ring months earlier,' Nicola, 30, told the outlet. 'I knew after three months that I wanted to marry her,' Brooklyn admitted. 'But because of COVID, I wanted to wait until our families could be there.' Nicola detailed the proposal, which took place in July 2020, telling the publication it came as a surprise to her. 'Brooklyn had secretly planned everything. I thought he was just organizing a date. Since it was just him and my mom, I had no idea. In reality, my brothers, sister and dad had secretly flown in and were hiding,' she explained. 'After the proposal, everyone arrived in golf carts. I cried so much that my face swelled up. I could barely take a picture, and I didn't really see the ring until later.' Nicola also said that she felt an instant connection herself when she first met Brooklyn at the Coachella music festival in April 2017, despite both of them being in separate relationships. 'Our encounter was brief, but special. I had a boyfriend, Brooklyn a girlfriend, but I immediately felt his charm,' Nicola recalled. 'He took a few photos of me and stayed in my heart long before we really knew each other.' The pair tied the knot at Nicolas' family's Palm Beach estate in April 2022, and Brooklyn recounted how he shed tears on the big day after seeing his bride-to-be. 'I'm usually relaxed, but on this day, even I was nervous. I had to wait 10 minutes for Nicola — it felt like an eternity! But when she finally arrived, everything was forgotten, and I cried, too,' he confessed. 'One of my fondest memories remains the short car ride after the ceremony — just the two of us, taking a moment to breathe and savor the moment.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Wordle hints today for #1,454: Clues and answer for Thursday, June 12
Hey, there! Today is both National Peanut Butter Cookie Day and National Jerky Day, so whether you prefer sweet or savory snacks, it's perhaps an excuse to have a little treat. One other thing you might treat yourself to is seeing your Wordle streak tick one number higher. To help make sure that happens, here's our daily Wordle guide with some hints and the answer for Thursday's puzzle (#1,454). It may be that you're a Wordle newcomer and you're not completely sure how to play the game. We're here to help with that too. Wordle is a deceptively simple daily word game that first emerged in 2021. The gist is that there is one five-letter word to deduce every day by process of elimination. The daily word is the same for everyone. Wordle blew up in popularity in late 2021 after creator Josh Wardle made it easy for players to share an emoji-based grid with their friends and followers that detailed how they fared each day. The game's success spurred dozens of clones across a swathe of categories and formats. The New York Times purchased Wordle in early 2022 for an undisclosed sum. The publication said that players collectively played Wordle 5.3 billion times in 2024. So, it's little surprise that Wordle is one of the best online games and puzzles you can play daily. To start playing Wordle, you simply need to enter one five-letter word. The game will tell you how close you are to that day's secret word by highlighting letters that are in the correct position in green. Letters that appear in the word but aren't in the right spot will be highlighted in yellow. If you guess any letters that are not in the secret word, the game will gray those out on the virtual keyboard. However, you can still use those letters in subsequent guesses. You'll only have six guesses to find each day's word, though you still can use grayed-out letters to help narrow things down. It's also worth remembering that letters can appear in the secret word more than once. Wordle is free to play on the NYT's website and apps, as well as on Meta Quest headsets and Discord. The game refreshes at midnight local time. If you log into a New York Times account, you can track your stats, including the all-important win streak. If you have a NYT subscription that includes full access to the publication's games, you don't have to stop after a single round of Wordle. You'll have access to an archive of more than 1,400 previous Wordle games. So if you're a relative newcomer, you'll be able to go back and catch up on previous editions. In addition, paid NYT Games members have access to a tool called the Wordle Bot. This can tell you how well you performed at each day's game. Before today's Wordle hints, here are the answers to recent puzzles that you may have missed: Yesterday's Wordle answer for Wednesday, June 11 — PLAID Tuesday, June 10 — TAFFY Monday, June 9 — BOARD Sunday, June 8 — LEASE Saturday, June 7 — REUSE Every day, we'll try to make Wordle a little easier for you. First, we'll offer a hint that describes the meaning of the word or how it might be used in a phrase or sentence. We'll also tell you if there are any double (or even triple) letters in the word. In case you still haven't quite figured it out by that point, we'll then provide the first letter of the word. Those who are still stumped after that can continue on to find out the answer for today's Wordle. This should go without saying, but make sure to scroll slowly. Spoilers are ahead. Here is a hint for today's Wordle answer: A female fox and one of Santa's reindeer. There are no repeated letters in today's Wordle answer. The first letter of today's Wordle answer is V. This is your final warning before we reveal today's Wordle answer. No take-backs. Don't blame us if you happen to scroll too far and accidentally spoil the game for yourself. What is today's Wordle? Today's Wordle answer is... VIXEN Not to worry if you didn't figure out today's Wordle word. If you made it this far down the page, hopefully you at least kept your streak going. And, hey: there's always another game tomorrow.