To help get us to that future as soon as possible, Facebook just created a new "Social VR" team to focus entirely on figuring out ways that virtual reality can help people connect, the company writes in a blog post.
Daniel James, known for the multiplayer online game Puzzles Pirates, and Mike Booth, who created the Left 4 Dead franchise, will lead the new team. They'll work both with Oculus and other divisions within Facebook proper.
Since Facebook bought VR company Oculus for $2 billion two years ago, it has helped launch Samsung's $99 Gear VR headset, and plans to start shipping its own, more expensive headset this spring.
As of Facebook's announcement today, there are more than 200 games and apps in the Oculus store and more than 20,000 360-degree videos uploaded to Facebook. These videos pair well with virtual reality headsets because they let you explore a scene from every angle.
Facebook says that it's now launching its "dynamic streaming" feature, which will allow 360-video viewers to use less bandwidth by only showing the parts of a video that the user is looking at the highest resolution.
"We create dozens of variants for every 360 video that gets uploaded to Facebook, each tailored to a specific viewing angle, and then as you watch the video, we rapidly adjust which variant we display based on where you're looking," Facebook says.
While it's easy to imagine a dsytopian VR-driven future where all of our real-life interactions become usurped by those in a virtual world, the new Social VR team is presumably focused on considering responsible ways to integrate VR on Facebook.
CEO Mark Zuckerberg has said in the past that he plans to shares his new baby's first steps through VR.