
‘The music is better than at the clubs in Ohio': Virtual reality is the hottest new nightlife destination
VRChat, a video-game-like social platform hosted in virtual reality, saw more than 130,000 people in attendance on New Year's Day 2025, according to a VR culture blog. Before 2020, VRChat had hardly seen more than 20,000 concurrent users, according to Wired.
While virtual clubbing began in the early 2000s on platforms like Second Life, VRChat, and AltspaceVR, the COVID-19 lockdowns brought a new wave of virtual ravers as traditional nightclubs closed and people looked for online alternatives. Today, VR clubbers line up each week for dozens of fully immersive virtual parties hosted across the U.S., Europe, and Asia.
Thanks to major advances in motion tracking, haptic suits, and customizable avatars, people can now dance to popular DJ sets and socialize—all without leaving their homes.
Aside from the up-front hardware cost, events are free. But, like popular in-person clubs, there are often long lines for the most in-demand virtual nights, which are usually limited to around 80 guests due to software constraints.
VR clubbing carries its own risks. Psychiatrists and ER doctors have reported some attendees going on 'digital benders,' partying to the point of total exhaustion, according to Psychology Today. One partier told Wired he's had friends hospitalized after binge-drinking on VRChat. Another said he partied for nearly 12 nights straight last August—without once stepping outside his apartment.
Still, virtual partying has its perks. If the music's too loud, you can just turn it down. Ready to go home? No need to worry about Ubers or navigating public transport at 3 a.m. Personal safety and harassment are also less of a concern. Wired spoke to a trans woman from rural Ohio who described VRChat as offering 'a safer environment than a real-life club setting,' adding, 'the music is better than at the clubs in Ohio.'

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More recently, the Supreme Court's decision upholding Texas' porn ID law—which is similar to laws in at least 20 other states and requires adult websites to verify their users are at least 18—has raised the question of whether some people may instead make AI porn at home, bypassing these platforms altogether. Its increasing ability to create hyperreal sexual images, catered specifically to a person's desires, can now produce porn that is just as orgasmic as any human-generated video floating around on aggregator sites. Companion apps like Nomi and Replika are also being used as alternatives to build intimate relationships and have sex with AI bots. But 'AI porn, in itself, is not necessarily a problem,' says Paula Hall, a psychotherapist at London's Laurel Centre, the leading specialist provider of treatment for CSBD in the UK, 'but rather the way in which it is used.' As people become more accustomed to getting what they want from realistic AI renderings of porn, in addition to the buffet of erotic media that already exists across the internet, human connection, for some, may no longer be enough, says Monifa Ellis-Addie, a therapist at Banyan Therapy Group in Los Angeles, a faith-based counseling practice. In the most extreme cases, mental health professionals say that an increased dependency will enable people to fully detach. 'The effects are going to be pretty damaging,' Ellis-Addie says. For some people, sex addiction is built on a kind of 'faux-intimacy,' she continues. 'AI is only going to make that easier. It's going to feel as if you're dealing with an actual person, and with an actual person comes things like actual feelings. It will make people more distant in real life.' Kyle's epiphany that it was time to finally temper his addiction came during a work trip to New York City in February. He was alone in a hotel, away from his girlfriend, and, he says, 'I just kept doing it and doing it but I didn't feel any better.' He's since taken action to limit his need to masturbate, including joining the Reddit support group NoFap, where members share similar struggles. Professionals believe that could make initiating new IRL relationships more difficult. Young people are currently facing a mental health crisis. Last year, the US surgeon general called for a warning label on all social media platforms. One major consequence has been a 'loneliness epidemic,' according to a 2024 Harvard study, which suggested that people who feel more alone suffer from higher rates of depression and anxiety. 'Social media has distorted our views on so many things—body image, social class, politics. It's hurt people in many ways,' says Daniel Glazer, a psychotherapist at Fifth Ave Psychiatry in New York, citing loneliness, isolation, depression, shame, and issues related to sexual performance as areas of concern. What's happening with AI porn 'could be another extension of that,' he adds. But AI also has the potential for real 'positive crossover' for people who struggle with relationships, both platonic and romantic. 'I understand sex addiction as a way to avoid life, a way to avoid relationships. So AI can be a kind of a bridge to someone who's fearful of a relationship,' Glazer says. 'Here's a relationship that isn't scary and one where you won't be criticized.' They'll just have to manage their reliance on it. More recently, Kyle has fully curbed his intake of adult content. Though AI porn is still in its early days, he considers it 'one of the worst technological developments that we have coming up right now' because of its over accessibility. 'It's worse than the real thing.'