WORK IN PROGRESS
Step inside your sound.
ASMR Toy VR transforms relaxing audio mixing into a fully immersive, spatial experience. Instead of arranging clips on a flat screen, you sculpt sound in 3D space around you. Reach out. Grab textures. Place whispers, taps, brushes, and ambiences exactly where you want them to live.
Feel surrounded by your own mix.
? Build Spatial ASMR Environments
Create interactive audio scenes using a growing library of satisfying, high-quality sound clips ? or import your own. Position sounds anywhere in your environment and experience true 3D audio as you move naturally through the space.
Walk through your mix.
Sit in the center of it.
Let it orbit around you.
Shape the Atmosphere
Choose from multiple reverberation environments designed to enhance depth and immersion ? from intimate close-up textures to expansive, dreamy spaces. Subtle acoustic shifts make each session feel unique and personal.
Intuitive Hand Interaction
Use motion controls or hand tracking to grab, rotate, scale, and layer sound objects. Arrange floating audio spheres, stack textures, or gently disperse them around you. Your mix becomes something physical.
Passive or Active Mode
Want to build? Create and refine your perfect soundscape.
Want to relax? Load a saved mix and let the world play around you while you breathe, stretch, meditate, or simply exist inside it.
Designed for Focus & Calm
Whether you're winding down after a long day, seeking deeper focus, or exploring immersive sound art, ASMR Toy VR turns audio into a space you inhabit.
What is ASMR?
An autonomous sensory meridian response (ASMR) is a tingling sensation that usually begins on the scalp and moves down the back of the neck and upper spine. A pleasant form of paresthesia, it has been compared with auditory-tactile synesthesia and may overlap with frisson. ASMR is a subjective experience of "low-grade euphoria" characterized by "a combination of positive feelings and a distinct static-like tingling sensation on the skin". It is most commonly triggered by specific auditory stimuli, and less commonly by intentional attention control.
