VR Fairy Tales Experience Captivates Andorra Christmas Village
Immersive VR adventure in Andorra la Vella's Poblet de Nadal lets up to 45 participants explore interactive classic fairy tales as protagonists in.
Key Points
- Transports users into interactive fairy tales via VR headsets, finding lost grandmother with touch-guided orbs.
- Digital environments simulate motion and realism; light candles to unlock scenes.
- Supports 45 simultaneous users as avatars; 15-min sessions in four languages, accessible for reduced mobility.
- Developed by blit.studio; strong repeat visits due to thrilling immersion like flying on Aladdin's carpet.
A virtual reality experience called *Fairy Tales: The City of Fairy Tales* has emerged as one of the standout attractions at Andorra la Vella's Poblet de Nadal Christmas village. The immersive activity transports participants—adults and children alike—into interactive worlds drawn from classic fairy tales, using VR headsets in a plain room that belies its magical contents.
Visitors don the glasses and embark on a quest to find a lost grandmother, who guides them through the adventure via arrows and glowing orbs that appear on touch. The digital environments feel strikingly real: rocky paths prompt cautious steps on a flat floor, interactive elements like candles can be lit to unlock new scenes, and users wander through tales as active protagonists. Up to 45 people can join simultaneously, seeing each other as avatars in the shared virtual space.
The technology cleverly manipulates perception, with moving digital surroundings tricking the brain into sensing bodily motion, heightening emotional engagement. Marc Colominas of blit.studio, which developed the experience, explained how this creates a more lifelike immersion. One participant, Adrià Martínez, highlighted the thrill of flying on Aladdin's carpet: "That part gave quite an impression."
Designed for both residents and tourists, the activity runs in four languages and accommodates people with reduced mobility. Though often seen as child-focused, it appeals across ages. Colominas described the response as "impressive," with strong word-of-mouth leading some to repeat the 15-minute sessions multiple times. On a recent Monday, around 15 people filled a slot, emerging smiling from the surprise finale.
This marks Andorra's first such VR offering, blending holiday festivities with cutting-edge tech in a way that turns storybook fiction into tangible adventure.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: