Momokun - 3 - Videos - Asuna-s Ultimate Vr- Onsen...
The final video, “Afterglow,” was quieter, almost private. Asuna had rendered the onsen at dusk: paper lanterns glowing like small suns, the soundscape pared down to one cello and the distant, measured drip of water. She’d leaned toward the camera then, not as a performer but as a friend, and spoken in a low, candid tone about why she’d created the series. She told them about the weight of streaming, the exhaustion that hid behind curated smiles, and how she’d built the VR onsen as a refuge where she could rehearse being human, messy and unedited. The chat went still for a beat; her honesty threaded through viewers across time zones.
The content you're looking for refers to the Sword Art Online VR: Lovely Honey Days Momokun - 3 videos - Asuna-s Ultimate VR- Onsen...
These videos utilize 180-degree or 360-degree filming techniques. When viewed through a VR headset (like an Oculus/Meta Quest or Valve Index), the viewer feels as though they are sitting across from Asuna in a traditional Japanese bathhouse. She told them about the weight of streaming,
As the upload bar crept forward, messages poured in—viewers swapping their own refuges: a rooftop garden, a late-night diner that stayed open for the ones who couldn’t sleep, a grandmother’s kitchen. One message stood out: “I built a room in VR where I can visit my dad. Your onsen helped me go there again.” Asuna paused, throat tight. The onsen had become more than a personal balm; it was a doorway for others. When viewed through a VR headset (like an