Oculus VR founder Palmer Luckey has high hopes for his company's Oculus  Rift virtual reality headset and for the future of virtual reality  overall.  
Speaking with Eurogamer  this week, Luckey said though virtual reality technology still has a  ways to go, it could advance to the level of what was seen in The Matrix in the coming years. 
"VR tech today is still very crude, but it's advancing rapidly," Luckey  said. "I think in a few years, maybe a few decades depending on how  lucky we are, we'll be able to get Matrix-level virtual reality
." Also in the interview, Oculus VR COO Laird Malamed said the company has  held discussions with Microsoft and Sony about bringing the technology  to consoles. 
"They're a little busy,"  Malamed said. "We've chatted, but they're  trying to bring their new consoles out. It's a possibility--it would  work. It's the same thing as iOS--it could technically work, but the  business side isn't there." 
There's even the possibility that Microsoft and/or Sony are working on  virtual reality headsets of their own. Malamed said he would welcome  this move, because it would mean the market for virtual reality games is  growing.  
"They're big companies with lots of resources. For us we'd say good," he  said. "With John Carmack coming over as our CTO, we've had a great  Kickstarter campaign, they continue to be great supporters, but we're  still a start-up. VR's had a lot of failures in the past, and so the  more people that enter the market is good because developers that  ultimately have to develop the content, they know they'll have people  playing their games which is better for all of us." 
Malamed also revealed that more than 20,000 developer units of the  Oculus Rift have been shipped since they became available earlier this  year. Development kits are available today for $300 each.  
