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One Seat, Infinite Worlds: China’s XR Cinemas Are Redefining Movies Forever


China is rapidly pioneering the future of cinema with immersive XR (Extended Reality) and VR technologies, transforming passive viewing into active participation. Recent developments highlight this shift: the groundbreaking Boundless XR Cinemas (also known as Boundaryless Cinema System) at Xi'an Film Studio Park, and the National Film Administration's approval of 14 new VR films, bringing the total with official "Dragon Seal" permits to 28.

One Seat, Infinite Worlds: China's XR Revolution Redefines Cinema

Imagine stepping inside a movie rather than just watching it. At the Boundless XR Cinemas in Xi'an Film Studio Park, this is now reality—and it recently earned national spotlight on CCTV, China's premier TV channel.

Powered by ultra-lightweight Pimax XR headsets (just 180g), viewers enjoy stunning 8K ultra-HD binocular visuals, a wide field of view, and ultra-low latency. These advancements drastically cut motion sickness, enabling comfortable, extended immersion where audiences interact naturally with virtual environments. No longer limited to observation, people become participants in the story.

The innovation extends to production. At Xi'an Film Studio, directors seamlessly switch virtual scenes—from a majestic Tang Dynasty palace to a futuristic metropolis—while actors perform across eras in the same physical space. This slashes costs, time, and logistics of traditional set construction and location shoots. The studio also deploys an AI-powered platform for scriptwriting and storyboarding, with an upcoming XR module set to advance spatial storytelling even further.

Bolstering this momentum, China established its first National Virtual Reality Film Technology Innovation Center at Xi'an Film Studio (under the Xi'an Film Group / XIYING GROUP). The center is developing national standards for XR cinema, including production quality, hardware certification, and content guidelines.

This push aligns with broader national support. On January 13 (recently), the Chinese National Film Administration approved 14 VR films for production, raising the total number of VR projects with the official Dragon Seal (film release permit) to 28. Nearly 140 VR film projects have been submitted for filing, signaling explosive growth.

The policy foundation was laid earlier with the world's first national guideline—"Notice on Promoting the Orderly Development of Virtual Reality Films"—integrating VR into China's official film classification and licensing system. During the recent New Year holiday, XR cinemas in cities like Beijing, Xi'an, and Guiyang drew huge crowds, with audiences raving about the breathtaking visuals and profound sense of presence.

As China's mature VR hardware ecosystem meets strong policy backing, immersive cinema is moving from experimental labs to mainstream industry. Xi'an Film Studio—once a historic hub—is now breathing new life into global filmmaking.

In one seat, with one lens, audiences unlock infinite worlds. The future of cinema isn't on the screen—it's all around you

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