The VR Taekwondo Revolution Beginning in Malaysia
Traditional martial art evolves into virtual reality arena, enabling injury-free sparring

- •VR Taekwondo utilizing VR headsets and sensors spreads in Malaysia, enabling injury-free martial arts training
- •First World Championships held last year with Malaysian athlete placing fourth, demonstrating technical capability
- •Attracting attention from e-sports generation and parents as a digital transformation model for traditional martial arts
Kicking While Wearing a Headset
At a university auditorium in Kuala Lumpur, taekwondo athletes Gan Jing Yuan (20) and Asadullah Mohammad Azhbi completed their sparring preparations. However, unlike typical taekwondo matches, the two athletes do not make physical contact with each other. They compete in a virtual space while wearing VR headsets and motion sensors.
VR Taekwondo is a new form of sport where athletes wear headsets, motion sensors, and joysticks to compete against opponents in a digital arena. In Malaysia, some dojangs have begun adopting this technology since last year, attracting growing interest from teenagers and parents alike.
The Birth of Injury-Free Taekwondo
Gan Jing Yuan practiced taekwondo from childhood but had to stop sparring at age 14 due to an ankle injury. Sparring with heavy physical contact carries high injury risks, and many athletes face similar challenges.
VR Taekwondo solves this problem. Athletes face their opponents in virtual space through headsets, competing without actually touching each other. A total of five sensors—one on the back and two on each leg—track movements, while joysticks execute blocking actions.
Master Tony Lee Chun Wah explained, "With reduced injury risks, more parents will accept their children's participation in taekwondo. Given that e-sports are popular among teenagers, this technology is a natural evolution."
Like a Game, But Real Martial Arts
The competition format resembles arcade fighting games. Athletes attempt as many kicks as possible to deplete their opponent's health bar. Each match consists of three one-minute rounds, with referees managing the distance between athletes.
Master Lee emphasized, "You're not playing a game on a smartphone or screen—you're entering into the game itself. Don't let the game play you; you play the game."
Athletes are prohibited from touching their headsets during matches. This is considered cheating as it can cause technical issues and force a rematch. Master Lee explained, "An athlete who is losing might deliberately touch the headset to restart the match."
The Current State of VR Taekwondo in Malaysia
Master Lee described VR Taekwondo as "Malaysia's new baby." Though still in its early stages, Malaysian athletes demonstrated potential by placing fourth in one category at the 1st Taekwondo Virtual World Championships held in Singapore last year.
Drawing on his extensive experience coaching taekwondo at the university level, Master Lee predicted "this will become a trend" and decided to learn this new approach himself. Several institutions, including Asia Pacific University of Technology & Innovation (APU), are now introducing VR Taekwondo programs.
Future Outlook [AI Analysis]
VR Taekwondo has strong potential to become a major case study in sports technology innovation as it merges traditional martial arts with digital technology. Reduced injury risks could particularly lead to increased youth sports participation rates, offering the advantage of providing both physical activity and digital experiences to the e-sports generation.
However, technical stability and fairness issues will require continuous improvement. Key challenges include preventing cheating through headset manipulation, improving sensor accuracy, and resolving network latency problems.
If VR Taekwondo spreads throughout Southeast Asia with Malaysia as its center, it could present a new model for the digital transformation of traditional martial arts. Within 2-3 years, expansion of Asian regional competitions and growth of the related industrial ecosystem are anticipated.
댓글 (3)
기사 잘 봤습니다. 다른 시각의 분석도 읽어보고 싶네요.
VR에 대해 더 알고 싶어졌습니다. 후속 기사 부탁드립니다.
흥미로운 주제입니다. 주변에도 공유해야겠어요.
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