What If...? An Immersive Story
What If...? An Immersive Story is an entertainment app for Apple Vision Pro. You have been chosen! Step inside the limitless possibilities of Marvel Studios' What If...?
Entertainment company offering Disney+ on Apple Vision Pro with immersive environments, Spatial Audio, and select 3D movies.
What If...? An Immersive Story is an entertainment app for Apple Vision Pro. You have been chosen! Step inside the limitless possibilities of Marvel Studios' What If...?
Streaming app for Apple Vision Pro with Disney+ environments, Spatial Audio, and select 3D movies.
AppleInsider reported that Disney Imagineers used Apple Vision Pro as a virtual audio-mixing workspace while reworking Soarin' Across America for EPCOT, based on Disney's behind-the-scenes video about the attraction overhaul.
Apple honored the inaugural Apple Vision Pro App of the Year and Game of the Year at the 2024 App Store Awards. What If An Immersive Story from Marvel Studios, ILM Immersive, and Disney+ won Vision Pro App of the Year, and THRASHER: Arcade Odyssey from Puddle, LLC won Vision Pro Game of the Year, recognizing experiences that pushed the boundaries of spatial computing.
Disney lists What If...? An Immersive Story on the App Store as an Apple Vision Pro app in the entertainment category.
Disney+ launched as a native Apple Vision Pro app on February 2, available to Disney+ subscribers at no additional cost. The visionOS app shipped with four immersive viewing environments — the Disney+ Theater inspired by Hollywood's El Capitan Theatre, the Scare Floor from Pixar's Monsters Inc., Marvel's Avengers Tower over downtown Manhattan, and the cockpit of Luke Skywalker's landspeeder on Tatooine — alongside support for select titles in stereoscopic 3D and Spatial Audio.
Bloomberg reported that YouTube and Spotify joined Netflix in declining to release native apps for Apple Vision Pro at its February 2 launch, and that the companies would also block their existing iPad apps from being available on the device. Netflix said subscribers could use the web browser on Vision Pro instead, mirroring how Netflix works on Macs. The decision left Vision Pro's launch-day media lineup leaning on Disney+, Max, Amazon Prime Video, Paramount+, Peacock, Apple TV+, and others while the largest streaming and video platforms stayed away from native visionOS.