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🎮 Cut the cord, not the experience — wireless PCVR redefined!
The PRISMXR Puppis S1 is a compact, high-performance WiFi6 AX3000 router designed exclusively for wireless PC-VR streaming. Featuring a powerful 1.3GHz dual-core chipset and PrismPulse Mode, it creates a dedicated, ultra-stable connection between your PC and VR headsets like Meta Quest 3/3S/2 and Pico 4. With speeds up to 3000 Mbps and a smart PrismXR Desktop app for easy troubleshooting and optimization, it replaces clunky link cables with seamless wireless freedom. Compatible with Windows 10/11 and major VR software, Puppis S1 elevates your VR gaming to a lag-free, immersive new level.












| ASIN | B0CFDL5Y7F |
| Antenna Location | Gaming |
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,176 in Video Games ( See Top 100 in Video Games ) #28 in Standalone Virtual Reality Accessories |
| Brand | PRISMXR |
| Built-In Media | QSG |
| Color | White |
| Compatible Devices | Compatible with Meta Quest 3/2/3S/Pro, Compatible with PICO 4/Ultra |
| Connectivity Protocol | Wi-Fi, Bluetooth |
| Connectivity Technology | Wi-Fi |
| Controller Type | App Control |
| Coverage | Home/Office |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 out of 5 stars 1,133 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 2402 Megabits Per Second |
| Frequency | 5 GHz |
| Frequency Band Class | Dual-Band |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00749752208134 |
| Has Internet Connectivity | Yes |
| Is Electric | Yes |
| Is Modem Compatible | No |
| LAN Port Bandwidth | 11000 Mbps |
| Manufacturer | PRISMXR PTE LTD |
| Maximum Upstream Data Transfer Rate | 2402 Megabits Per Second |
| Mfr Part Number | P1411 |
| Model Name | Puppis S1 |
| Model Number | Puppis S1 |
| Number of Antennas | 1 |
| Number of Ports | 5 |
| Operating System | Windows 10 |
| Other Special Features of the Product | Access Point Mode |
| Router Network Type | Wi-Fi |
| Security Protocol | WPA2-PSK, WPA3 |
| Smart Home Compatibility | Not Smart Home Compatible |
| Special Feature | Access Point Mode |
| UPC | 749752208134 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 18 Volts |
| Warranty Description | 18 Months |
| Wi-Fi Generation | WiFi6 |
| Wireless Communication Standard | 802.11ax |
| Wireless Compability | 802.11ax |
R**B
Wow, why didn’t I know about this 3 years ago when I started wireless PCVR?!?
My wireless PCVR journey has been a long one. Starting with a basic wifi 5 router and wondering why people even PCVR at all because of all the lag, stuttering, and pixelated screens. Fast forward to today, upgraded router, wired PC connection, etc. My PCVR gaming experience today is leap years ahead of where it was but it was still a long bumpy road with dozens upon dozens of hours of troubleshooting every little component, driver and wifi setting imaginable. That last big hurdle (troubleshooting network/wifi settings, drivers, etc) could have been sped up if I had incorporated the PrismXR Puppis S1 into my setup a long time ago! What the Puppis S1 provides to you is a dedicated WIFI connection that is WIRED to your PC via a USB-C cable. Think of it as using a Link cable from your headset directly to your PC, but without the need for the physical cable connected to your headset. Being a dedicated connection means that your WIFI connection to your PC is not encumbered by all of the other WIFI traffic in your house. This means you have a dedicated WIFI connection for your headset and then a dedicated USB-C cable to your PC. That results in a very stable, lag-free connection which helps keep your wireless PCVR gaming experience running buttery smooth and stable. But not every PC setup is optimized for wireless PCVR and that’s where the PrismXR Desktop app comes into play. With a click of a button, the app scans through dozens of different settings and metrics to determine if there are any issues or potential issues that would cause your wireless VR gaming experience to suffer. After the scan, the app will highlight issues and recommend potential fixes. Of the ones I saw, the instructions to fix were fairly clear to understand if you have just a little bit of PC or networking experience. And some options even have a simple “Fix” button to click. The Desktop app also has a few other tabs to diagnose and help you troubleshoot issues. For example, it shows a diagram of your setup (PC, headset, Puppis S1 and how they’re linked together). If any link has an issue, it will be highlighted on the diagram. Another helpful feature is a wifi channel scan tool that scans your wifi environment and highlights what routers are using which channels (including your neighbors which were interfering with mine!). And from there, it recommends available channels that won’t conflict with other wifi hotspots and allows you to switch the Puppis S1 to another channel. The range of the Puppis S1 seems comparable to my other Wifi5/6e mesh nodes in my house. For example, I am receiving a medium strength signal from where the Puppis S1 is located to my living room (down a hallway 30 feet, hard right turn, opens up into the living room 40 feet — with the hard right turn being the issue for most wifi connections). If you play wireless PCVR a lot, I would highly recommend adding the Puppis S1 to your setup. Beyond just the dedicated gaming experience, it also turns your PC into a wireless access point to connect to the rest of your network. It’s a good investment for having the best wireless PCVR gaming experience in my opinion.
V**!
THE best way to wirelessly connect your quest 3 to your gaming PC!
This thing really works great. I have to say once you figure it out., which is not really all that hard although I have to say you really will have to get virtual desktop to make it work as good as it can. I can be 2530 feet away with the door closed to the bathroom sitting on the toilet and it runs half-life Alex just about as good as it does when I’m sitting 5 feet away from my gaming PC.. however it did take just a little bit of tweaking some things you have to kind of set up your firewall and stuff and it’s kind of like I don’t know. It’s a little bit confusing for somebody who doesn’t have much knowledge about local area and network stuff or about like how to set up Wi-Fi stuff and what all that garbage means about the different kinds of security and how to route things and all that stuff but once you figure out the fact that all you need to do is plug it into the back of the computer two of your USB 3.0 slots or whatever, and that it is essentially a Wi-Fi six router, with a 5G capable direct to your quest three headset ultra fast high bandwidth channel essentially for Wi-Fi, and that it is only for connecting your gaming, PCs, visual output, and stuff like that to your quest three headset, it’s pretty easy to use. You have to use on your quest three by the way, cause this was confusing to me at first, you have to connect the quest three Wi-Fi connection to the device, and it can be a little bit hickey sometimes in settings and stuff in your computer get changed without you knowing it or like when you download something that changes things, otherwise it’s a freaking fantastic device. I mean it works amazingly well for the price. I got it on sale and I am very happy with it., and by the way, it’s very small. It’s only about the size of like two fists on top of each other., I assumed it would be the same size as my charter cable a little Wi-Fi tower, but it’s like half that size or less, very compact! All in all I would say this is the best way to play PCVR on the quest three, save for a direct link cable. And it’s worth the price( especially when it’s on a big sale and goes down a good $15 or more I price! All in all I give it a 5/5 stars!
K**I
The Best PCVR Solution for the Quest
Edit: The Prism was working great for about a month. Now it will not connect to the internet via internet sharing and it is unreliable when using the Quest 3. When in a VR session I get a shaking in the headset for about 15 seconds and the link seems to drop out and freezes. I have reset the Prism and tested my internet sharing on my PC with another device. The Prism is a no go now for PCVR. I recommend buying a real router and skipping this low quality device. The Prism XR is the best PCVR solution for the Quest. I have had all three versions of the Quest. I’ve had the official link cable, aftermarket link cables, the VR AirBridge, and a number of different routers. I’ve tried Airlink with Oculus Debug Tool, Quest Link, Airlink, and Virtual Desktop through the years trying to find the best solution for PCVR in the Quest. I finally got tired of messing with my latest router which is dedicated to PCVR only and bought the Prism XR. One caveat with the Prism XR is that you won’t want to use it as an internet WiFi router. The Prism XR excels at being a wireless PCVR router and should be dedicated to just that. Your Quest should be the only client connected to the Prism XR. You need to have an existing WiFi or Ethernet connection for internet to get the best results with the Prism XR. View the purchase of the Prism XR as a VR accessory. The Prism XR paired with Virtual desktop is without a doubt the most reliable and offers the best visual fidelity of any other option for PCVR with the Quest. The Prism XR is very compact, easy to set up, and doesn’t even need an ethernet port. It uses two USB ports and you can just share your internet from your existing WiFi or Ethernet connection.
N**H
Phone app is gone, but still works with PC desktop app so far. Works well with my Quest 3
-This is older, but still seems to work. Using for my Quest 3 headset, and it's working well so far, allowing me to run games without judder issues from PC (Tested games like Beat Saber that need fast movement). -It took a bit to get it fully working, and it kept disconnecting from the PC, but rebooting the PC fixed it for me, and it' shad a good connection so far. -One thing to note, the phone app is gone. Searching the Google play store, it tells you the prismxr app does not work for newer Android, and so you can't even download it. Fortunately, the PC desktop app does work. However, this makes me feel this likely has no real support, since the Android app isn't being maintained. But it's fairly cheap, so hoping it lasts until the Steam Frame is out.
B**E
A must have for anyone interested in wireless pcvr
I’ll start by saying that I used this with a pico 4 ultra and already tried wireless pcvr. My current router for wifi isn’t bad, I even set up a mesh near my pc to see if that would help. While performance was decent, I’d still get the occasional stutter only present from the network and it would slow down the more people were home. Decided to just go for it and boy am I impressed. Any of those previously mentioned stutters? Gone, it’s just as stable as using a physical link cable. And I swear it’s more responsive. Super easy to setup, just plug in the two usb cables, download the program, and connect your headset to the designated WiFi it send out. Really, it’s the main reason I went for it, because the lite version and a regular router seem to require an Ethernet cable from the home router. You can set it up by using your phone, but I found the app pretty unresponsive and awful. The program on pc is all I’d recommend you use and it’s pretty useful. Oh, and fun thing I found out about it, you technically don’t need to be connected to any wifi for it to work with a headset. I know it should work, it’s a glorified router after all, but I was expecting it to use the home wifi to send signals, so color me surprised when it worked. Would be a great choice for anyone with poor connectivity.
H**R
Works great with the Meta Quest 3, better than the official cable
This is a great little device, plugs into your pc, connect to it from your quest 3 and stream PC games to your Quest 3. This is basically a USB Wifi card but with some software to drive it. It's the simplicity that makes it work. I'm sim racing enthusiast, full sim-rig and powerful PC. i9 13k, RTX 4090 etc. My motherboard has built in WiFi 6E, which I set up as a mobile hotspot to connect too, but I could only get around 200 mbs. I then purchased the official Meta Quest 3 usb-c, fiber optic cable, incidentally the exact same price as this device. The cable is rated at 5gps, with the cableI got around 2,400mbs. Great speed but annoying cable getting in the way when trying to race or play other none racing games off the sim-rig. I ended up returning the cable because of this device ended up being better all round. The unit is very small, it plugs into your PC using two USB leads, one high speed usb, the other normal usb. It's powered through the UBS's as well, no other additional leads required. You will need to download a mobile app to set up basic configuration, be nice to have a desktop companion app, it is a PC device after all. Very few setting to change, make sure you add a password for the connection. In your quest 3 headset you will see this as another Wifi connection point, connect as you would any other wifi. Now using quest steam app or virtual desktop you can stream PC games to the quest. Highly recommend the virtual desktop paid app for quest, lot more settings and more robust connection. I'm getting around 2,400mbs the same as the official USB-c cable, but no leads to get in the way. I can play Half Life Alex in Godlike mode, and it's smooth as butter, this is down mainly to my 4090 graphics card of course, but this little device handles the bandwidth and serves out the data flawlessly. For the exact same price of the official cable, you get same performance, nearly plug and play and it's simple to set up and use and of course wireless connection to the headset.
T**T
Works GREAT (once setup properly)! Having trouble setting up? This might be your fix
I cannot overstate how great this thing works. It has drastically cut down on my latency and improved function with my Quest 2 significantly. For context, my current setup is a Quest 2 (running Steam Link), 6 Slime VR body trackers, and finger tracking. My router is on the other side of my house and my PC is connected via ethernet. I had to get a wifi extender to be able to run everything. However, I noticed that I'd often have severe latency or loss of connection over the wifi extender since both my headset and my 6 trackers were running through it. My Slime VR trackers also experienced a lot of drifting due to this. After adding in the PrismXR Puppis S1, my latency completely went away and I've experienced far fewer connectivity issues. It absolutely works when installed properly I will say, installation was a bit difficult. You need to download the PrismXR app on your desktop and it might not hurt to have it on your phone as well. When you set up the network, your computer may automatically set the new PrismXR network to be the one that is shared. This WILL NOT WORK. You need to go into Network and Internet Settings, click on Change Adapter Options, turn OFF sharing on the newly created network (it will say something to the effect of "USB to Gigabit Ethernet"), and then turn ON sharing on your actual ethernet network. Once you set up the PrismPulse network (this is how you want it set up if you're using it as a dedicated VR connection directly to your PC), you should be good to go. Another thing to note is that Steam Link will not let you connect your headset unless the PrismXR app is running and you've clicked "click to start". All sorts of little things that make using the Puppis a little difficult, but once it's running, this thing is phenomenal. Highly recommend
A**M
A not so perfect solution to a wired problem.
I bought this with the sole intent of transmitting wirelessly to a new Quest 3 headset. The instructions are likely translated into English and written backwards so you'll want to start towards the last step in the process where it directs you to download an app on the PC side. After I realized what I was missing in the overly long setup and troubleshooting process to get it to link up and do its thing, the app was literally a few clicks and 'done'. I was deep into the weeds of my wifi settings and on the PC side looking at creating a 'bridge' and more, all for nothing. This dedicated router took care of it all, again once i realized what was needed. I'd mark it down a star for backwards instructions but the unit itself has been great. I really like that I can have a home wifi router wifi 5 etc. transmitting to my PC, and delivering more than adequate download speeds, while this unit plugs in between the PC itself and the Quest. Apparently, all traffic going out for like game saves etc. is viewed as traveling on top of the more consequential data that involves talking to the headset. Without setting things up correctly, both routers will compete and cause a bottleneck and the top 'blue light' on this device will be red or something. Ultimately showing things aren't connected right. This is where the aforementioned PC app gets downloaded from the Google play store and installed. Suddenly, it just looks at your setup, identifies the new router, configures it for you and the lights are all on like they should be, and the headset has a few internal settings to configure after that. As I play a few feet away from the router, I can't speculate on how it would be across the house or with walls in between, but I've had zero issues with it transmitting, via the much required "Virtual Desktop" and its PC companion which you grab from within the headset itself. It costs around $20. This is a necessary app to make the streaming of PC games out of Steam possible. All without any cabling. My home router is another room. Update (6 mths.): While the overall picture here demonstrates a plug n' play device and in many ways it still does that, I've since run into a host of issues as well. The biggest frustration is that Windows 11 in particular auto assigns priority for the internet to anything cabled, i.e. an Ethernet. What this does then is route the host PC's WiFi, assuming the main router is in another room as in my case, where it forces the incoming internet down to the antiquated 2.4 ghz band as built into this device. This means... if your setup includes a distant router projecting a 5 ghz wifi signal from another room, that maybe gives you 250 mb/s download speeds, connecting to this device (prismxr) will result in PC speeds capping around 70 mb/s. I spent weeks and months wrestling between windows networking settings, digging way deeper than one ought to, just to get things to run correctly and if you reboot the PC, Windows might just shift everything back over again so you lose your refined settings. As to game play, the whole reason for using this device was to work around the issue of not being cabled to a far away router. To be able to use the Quest 3 without any cabling either. Unfortunately, this hasn't worked out so well. Something this device claims to solve but apparently not as well as it would like. Also, I recently learned that I should have spent a little more and gone with a WIFI extender instead. This relies on the Ethernet connection on the back of the motherboard instead of USB 3.0/.2 connections which are also controlled by Windows. The same holds true for the various cables sold for the Quest 3. Thus, I'm purchasing the TP-Link RE813XE to replace the PrismXR (Puppis S1) device. The configuration will incorporate plugging the new device into a wall outlet, and running a cat6a cable to the Ethernet port on my motherboard. The WIFI extender will provide game data over a 6ghz band instead of the usual 5ghz found on many routers, to the Quest 3, while also allowing it to talk to the internet. The PC WIFI will be disabled solving a myriad of issues. The PC will then receive high speed internet directly from the WIFI extender which captures the main (older) router's WiFi signal in the other room. According to research, it should also smooth out judder etc. experienced in the VR headset, while still making use of the Virtual Desktop and Steam VR games. Having it ported over the Ethernet instead not only tells Windows 11 to stop looking for incompatible WIFI and related settings, while increasing game play bandwidth that was also limited by the USB configuration. It also means I have an usable Puppis S1 router, that's now 6 months old. The ideal configuration for the Quest 3 VR headset is to probably have the gaming PC tethered to the home router with high speed Ethernet cabling. The PC then uses its internal Windows managed software to control the USB ports which either incorporate the Puppis device, or a third party cable tied directly to the headset, while consequently limiting the potential for data transfer and resulting in lower quality VR experiences. Hopefully, going the WIFI extender route will solve everything even if it cost me twice the price of the PRISMXR (Puppis_ device.
S**M
Best solution for wireless VR
This device is genius. A dedicated and clear connection with your HMD, no interference whatsoever. All you need is 2 free USB ports, or in my case I used a (separate) usb-c connection. Power and ethernet to the Prismxr via usb. 10-20 minutes and few trial and errors in setting up later you have your wireless pcvr set-up ready. Works better than my 5ghz AP I set-up solely for my Q3. And it was cheaper than buying a new router for this purpose too. Money well spent.
S**.
Excellent produit, pour jouer en sans fil sur des jeux PCVR
Excellent produit pour ne plus avoir à utiliser de Câble sur PC. La qualité est au rendez-vous avec un résultat équivalent à du filaire ( meta Quest 3 en résolution max) 😄. Seul petit défaut la configuration n’est pas hyper évidente et le manuel d’utilisation est à revoir. Très satisfait de mon achat, je recommande 😉.
A**T
Excellent Small Router
Pros: 1. Mobile App made it easy to set up 2. The connection works and is seamless 3. It does make a difference when connecting meta quest 3 to PC to play PC VR games. Less lagging and less disconnection. 4. Router having feature to switch between 3 modes is helpful. 5. It is very small and compact. It will not take much space. 6. They have support in place via discord which is helpful. Cons: 1. If you don't follow instructions, it will cause confusion during set up. 2. The wire/cable needs to be a little longer for more ease of placement or organizing purposes. So far I do not have any issues yet. Overall, this is great! The customer service from PrismXR is top notch !
A**L
Perfecto
Nunca pensé que wireless PCVR podría ser tan fluido y a tal grado de calidad, no le pide nada a un cable. Literal lo conectas y en 5 min estas listo para elevar tu experiencia en VR
S**M
Klare Empfehlung! Tolles Teil
So schwer ist die Einrichtung jetzt auch nicht. Anleitung liegt bei und ist eigentlich in 5- 10min gemacht. Es gibt nicht viel was ma da einstellen muss. Funktioniert super, sehr schnelle Verbindung. Man sollte darauf achten, um das bestmögliche rauszuholen, dass der puppies im selben Raum steht in dem man auch spielt. Nur dann hat man die volle Leistung. Steht er z.b im Nebenzimmer, kann sich die Leistung auch schnell mal halbieren. Klare Empfehlung von mir!
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 days ago