Religion in the era of Oculus Rift and Magic Leap

Five years from now, or sometime in between, AR and VR will have become mainstream, and ordering a VR world would be nothing that a Fiverr gig can’t do.

Evangelical preachers will turn into this unchartered territory, as they turned to explore the Wild West and tried to save the souls they thought were strayed.

As 2012 passed, and like always, no catastrophe happened, other than the slow idiotization of our culture, future apocalyptic events seem to have run out of dates, until some archeologist reinterprets some ancient ruin in Iraq, and finds a new catchy number. Or until a creative troll on the Internet devises a new conspiracy altogether with a closer date, as to make it such an immediate urgency that droves of credulous will run into his Amazon Affiliate blog to purchase prepper equipment.

As century after century religious scatology never comes into fruition, they’ll have to make it happen, or re-create the experiences, if they want to keep selling their holy oils and fund their luxury jets.

So, imagine the concept and the business model:

Wait a moment, the last update might be problematic. Think about it, with sin prevention comes no sins, no guilt, no business. Some preachers could create a network of “temptation agents” to purify by test the faith of the flock, and these agents could get commission by referrals from those preachers. You got to keep the money rolling.

Just imagine the potential, the Catholic Church and the TV preachers of the US know nothing about money compared to this disruptive model. It could be called the Virtual Kingdom: “Come enjoy the benevolent dictatorship of Christ, here on Earth, for once.”

As for myself, I prefer to play the devil’s advocate in this case, and I’ll say that this goddamn business is meant to fail.