AI and VR — What It Actually Means for Someone Coming for an Evening
Technology
4 min read5/13/2026

AI and VR — What It Actually Means for Someone Coming for an Evening

Read any new "AI and VR" article and you’ll feel that in two years every venue will know your name, recall your preferences, and serve a personalized experience seemingly written for you. The 2026 reality in Israel is more nuanced. We’ll try to explain what it actually means at Space Run VR — and why we don’t chase every tech trend.

What AI Already Does in VR Today

Without going technical, AI enters VR in interesting ways: dynamic content adjusted to the player’s level, more natural virtual characters, faster motion-tracking systems, preference-based recommendations. Most of this is at a technical layer and doesn’t dramatically change a typical visitor’s experience today.

What Matters to Someone Coming Now

Not technology. Believe it or not, our visitors don’t ask about AI. They ask: how long, what’s included, where to park, will my kid have fun. The human questions. Even when AI plays a bigger role two years from now, those questions won’t change. The person leaving after 90 minutes remembers whether they enjoyed it — not whether the system "guessed" they’d like a particular track.

Where We Sit in All This

We don’t pose as the global tech frontier. Some venues abroad work with exclusive developments; massive platforms invest billions. We’re a Rishon LeZion venue running quality, working technology — not always the newest, but the kind delivering a stable, enjoyable experience. We prefer a smooth attraction over a buzzword-laden one that misbehaves. Stability is worth more to a guest than the name of a model running backstage.

What to Expect

Over the next year or two you’ll likely see changes here — new attractions, perhaps more tailored offerings, improving experiences. At a pace that feels right to us, not "what’s next on the roadmap". We’re not racing to be first; we’d rather be steady and good. If you want to come and try what’s here today — 138 ILS for a single, 90 minutes, Sun–Thu evenings. The rest is a conversation with us.