
This forgotten Google app let me explore Tokyo like an open world game, and it's surreal
Calvin Wankhede / Android Authority
When I'm planning a trip to a new destination, I try to get a feel for the place before I leave — especially if I'm going abroad. Not that I'm trying to mitigate culture shock, but it's helpful to know what the areas I'm visiting actually look like. I prefer knowing how walkable the area around my hotel is and what kind of restaurants are nearby ahead of time. Google Maps is of course my first choice for this task, and I've spent hours mindlessly tapping away.
But there's a better way. Nearly a decade ago, Google quietly released an app that lets you roam around the entire world and actually feel like you're standing in it. I'm talking about Google Earth VR, an app designed for the first generation of PC headsets but still works on modern hardware. It may not be the most accessible version of Google Earth, but it's a one-of-a-kind experience that has stuck with me and still offers first-person perspective immersion like nothing else out there.
Google Earth, but you're the main character
What makes Google Earth VR so special? The app wastes no time to demonstrate — the welcome tour opens with you suspended high above the Arches National Park in Utah at the crack of dawn. Press a button and time accelerates until the sun rises fully and the red rocks beneath are bathed in a warm glow. You get a few seconds to gaze at this endless vista surrounding you, but it's not long before you're dropped in the middle of Tokyo and surrounded by tall buildings instead. Finally, it shuttles you through a series of notable landmarks around the world, each at different times of day.
By the end of the tour, you're familiarized with the controls and left to explore. This is where Google Earth VR shines — you can fly yourself up to float above entire countries or shrink down to ground level and strain your neck to see the top of super tall buildings. You have the option to rotate the world around you, change perspectives, or gradually drift through a city like a drone. It's all smooth movement and you always feel like you're in control.
Google Earth VR lets you stand in the middle of a dense city or fly through it like a drone.
The Earth VR app also really comes into its own when you're in a city where Google has collected detailed 3D imagery like Tokyo, New York, and Paris. Scale yourself down to street level and it feels like you're physically there, just without the crowds or traffic around you. But even the best photogrammetry looks like an AI-generated mess when you're within spitting distance of it. Buildings turn mushy, cars look melted, and fine detail disappears.
Luckily then, the folks at Google employed a genius solution — moving a controller up to your head switches you into Street View. There's no better way to explain it than to say it's like standing in a Street View photo. You're at human height, free to look around with your head naturally. Better yet, you can teleport a few feet at a time to the next street view image or cross the street to see a different perspective. You can 'walk' through an entire city this way, ironically emulating an open world game.
Street View in VR: A game changer for travel
If you're unable to travel due to mobility limitations, Google Earth VR might be the closest alternative out there — and not in a gimmicky way. It offers a level of presence that flat screens simply can't match. From your own home, you can stand at the base of the Eiffel Tower, hover over the Golden Gate Bridge, or drift above the Sydney Opera House.
The app includes a built-in list of famous landmarks that you can visit instantly. Even better, you're not stuck with whatever lighting conditions the real world had when the imagery was captured. With a flick of your wrist, you can rotate the sun's position in the sky to change the time of day, casting long shadows from buildings or nailing the desolate look in a desert at midnight.
Google Earth VR lets you visit real world addresses, pop into Street View, and move around in human scale.
But even as a frequent traveler, Google Earth VR is incredibly handy. This is because it lets you input any address, just like the Maps app on your phone, so you can quickly zero in on a particular location.
If I want to see what the walk from my hotel to the subway looks like for my upcoming trip, I can simply fly down to the ground level and enter Street View. I did exactly this before leaving for Malaysia last year and walking around in Street View helped me realize that the city was far more car-centric than its Asian neighbors. It also helped me realize that one route to my hotel was much more accessible than another. With this information, I picked a different mode of transport that required some more walking but didn't force me to cross an eight-lane road.
Of course, you can't get a true feel of the neighborhood without live traffic or pedestrian activity — this sadly isn't Microsoft Flight Simulator with its moving cars. But you can still glean a lot about a place just by looking for clues in the environment. Are shops open during the day? Is the sidewalk well maintained? The list goes on.
For even the fundamentals of trip planning, Google Earth VR beats passively browsing maps on a phone. And even though the app hasn't received any major updates over the years, it pulls the latest Street View images from Google's servers. Any businesses or storefronts you see in the app, you will likely still encounter in the real world.
See the Earth before Google sunsets it forever
Calvin Wankhede / Android Authority
I first tried Google Earth VR years ago on an original Oculus Rift, back when true virtual reality was still a novelty and required drilling three infrared cameras into my wall. Still, the sense of scale and freedom it offered was impressive. But I more or less forgot about it — until I picked up a Meta Quest 3 last year and decided to revisit my old Oculus game library.
Google Earth VR doesn't run natively on the Quest, though. You'll need a VR-capable PC with a decent GPU and either a USB-C cable or decent router for wireless streaming. The idea is that your PC renders the game and streams the output to the headset. It may seem like a janky solution, but it's the only practical way for most people to experience this app in 2025.
Google Earth VR hasn't been updated in years, and I fear it's on borrowed time.
Setup complexity and hardware cost aside, Google Earth VR has never looked better than on the current crop of headsets. The improved visual fidelity makes it an almost surreal experience that I think everyone should experience. And yet, the app almost sits on the verge of abandonment today.
I was a bit surprised that the app still pulls in live 3D and Street View data from Google's servers, but that access could stop at any moment. So if you're even remotely curious and can still get your hands on the hardware, go see the world while it's still online.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
44 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Yellow warning for thunderstorms in Scotland extended as alert lifted for England
A yellow weather warning for thunderstorms in Scotland has been extended, as a similar alert for England was lifted. Parts of the UK were battered by thunderstorms on Saturday as the rainy weather caused flooding and travel disruption in parts of England. A yellow warning for thunderstorms in the eastern half of Northern Ireland will remain in place until 6pm. ⚠️ Yellow weather warning UPDATED ⚠️ Thunderstorms across parts of northern England and Scotland Valid until 18:00 Saturday Latest info 👉 Stay #WeatherAware⚠️ — Met Office (@metoffice) June 14, 2025 The Met Office said: 'Thunderstorms are currently spreading northwards across Scotland. 'Torrential downpours, lightning, hail and strong gusty winds are possible. 'Take care if you are travelling and stay weather aware.' The forecaster has extended its yellow warning for most of Scotland from 6pm to 9pm on Saturday. Scots have been warned that spray and sudden flooding that could make driving conditions difficult and lead to road closures. Thunderstorms are currently spreading northwards across Scotland Torrential downpours, lightning, hail and strong gusty winds are possible Take care if you are travelling and stay #WeatherAware ⚠️ — Met Office (@metoffice) June 14, 2025 The Met Office said the impact of any flooding or lightning could see transport delays, although no major transport issues were reported as of 5pm. It comes after torrential downpours caused transport disruption in Kent while Dover was hit with flooding. The Met Office had said as much as 80mm of rain could fall in the worst hit areas of the UK. More than 30,000 lightning strikes were recorded overnight, although most happened at sea. The wet weather came after the UK recorded its hottest day with West Suffolk reaching 29.4C. Scotland also had its warmest day of the year so far with 25.7C recorded in Lossiemouth in Moray. The Met Office said further outbreaks of heavy rain and thundery weather will affect parts of Scotland overnight, while elsewhere in the UK would become drier with some clear spells. The forecaster said Sunday would being better weather with variable amounts of clouds and sunny spells developing across the country, with a few isolated showers in the afternoon.


Geek Tyrant
an hour ago
- Geek Tyrant
Read 20 USAGI YOJIMBO Comics for $18 — GeekTyrant
Visit 'classic Japan' with everyone's favorite rabbit samurai with the Usagi Yojimbo: The Rabbit Ronin (affiliate link) bundle over on Humble. Get 20 volumes of Usagi Yojimbo comics and books valued at $287 for a mere $18! These comics are published by Dark Horse and written by Stan Sakai. If you've ever been interested in reading Usagi Yojimbo , bundles just like this are perfect and I highly recommend it. In addition, each purchase of the bundle supports The Hero Initiative which 'is the first-ever federally chartered not-for-profit corporation dedicated strictly to helping comic book artists and craftsmen in need.' This bundle will be available until June 29.

Engadget
an hour ago
- Engadget
Google Search uses AI-generated podcast hosts to answer your questions
Instead of digging through all the top search results, you can now ask Google Search to give you a comprehensive AI-generated summary with its Audio Overviews feature. The AI feature uses Google Gemini models to create a short audio clip that sounds like a conversational podcast with two hosts. It's not ideal for your basic search queries like finding out when Father's Day is, but it's helpful if you want an in-depth and hands-free response to the history and significance of Flag Day. The Audio Overviews option pulls from the front page Google Search results and compiles them into an audio summary where two voices bounce off each other for a more engaging answer. You can also adjust the volume and playback speed between 0.25x and 2x. Audio Overviews even includes the webpages it pulls the info from, letting you continue down the Google Search rabbit hole. It's not the first time Google has offered its Audio Overviews tool, but it was previously reserved for its NotebookLM tool. Google expanded on this feature by making Audio Overviews within NotebookLM more interactive, allowing you to ask the AI hosts questions in real-time, and added a "Deep Dive" option to get the AI to focus on a specific topic. To test out the Audio Overviews as part of Google Search, you have to opt into the Google Labs feature on its website.