Blair Williams - Reality Virtually ~repack~ -

Second, Williams challenges the concept of “place” by introducing the idea of virtual dwelling . In her essay “The Architecture of the Invisible,” she argues that humans do not merely visit digital spaces; they inhabit them. Using the example of long-term participants in massive multiplayer online worlds (MMOs), she notes that users develop what she calls “geographic nostalgia” for pixelated landscapes—a longing for a town square that exists only as code but has hosted weddings, funerals, and decades of friendship. Williams terms this phenomenon “Reality Virtually” to signify that the value of a space is not its materiality but its relational density. A virtual room where you confessed a secret to a loved one is just as real as a physical café; both alter your emotional landscape. For Williams, the digital is not a second-rate copy but a co-equal domain of human geography.

“A quietly effective VR scene that understands the medium’s greatest strength is not spectacle, but simulated presence. Blair Williams delivers one of the more believable ‘virtual partner’ performances of the era.” Blair Williams - Reality Virtually

Blair Williams - Reality Virtually: Blurring the Lines Between Fantasy and VR Second, Williams challenges the concept of “place” by