Residents of Brisbane, Australia, will soon be able to wear virtual reality suites to stop zombies from invading or investigating a secret military base. Zero Latency, a roaming VR entertainment and training organization, submitted an application to Brisbane City Hall last week. It hopes to open the first VR Arena in Brisbane and convert the electronic business outlets located at 34 Chester Street in Newstead District into virtual ones. Real space. Zero Latency currently has VR outlets in Melbourne, Australia, Tokyo, Japan, Madrid, Spain, and several locations in the United States. Boris Bielert, executive director of Zero Latency, said that although there is a confidentiality agreement, he revealed that by the end of 2017, the company will open operations in five other locations in Southeast Asia. Bilt also said that Zero Latency has seen tremendous growth in the past fiscal year, with a turnover of 12.5 million U.S. dollars. In Newstead's 1133m2 site, it is recommended that the actual playing area be approximately 400 square meters, but the venue is also suitable for tactical training and education. Applications submitted by Zero Latency show that places users can experience include military, law enforcement, emergency services, and mining. Kyel Smith, chief operating director of Zero Latency, said: "For training, we can redesign the training program." If Brisbane City Council approves their plans, the VR entertainment venue will open in October.
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