Windows Holographic. I’ll let that settle in for a few seconds.

After a series of Windows 10 announcements, Microsoft on Wednesday introduced a new Windows Holographic concept that brings augmented reality to the next level. Imagine seeing your epic Minecraft build right in your living room. All you need to do is take the blue pill before participating—go on down Microsoft’s rabbit hole!

There’s a headset (of course there is, and it’s called HoloLens), which allows wearers to pretty much see holograms wherever they go. You can see games, apps, and more, all enabled right from the headset. It doesn’t look real, but Microsoft says the headset will be available in the “Windows 10 timeframe,” which is vague and leaves a lot of wiggle room for interpretation. But the Redmond company is making clear that Holographic is something it intends on bringing to the market.

In one example, Microsoft showed off Skype being projected onto a wall; in another, a Minecraft world was easily accessible right in the middle of a living room. Microsoft says the experience is a “mixture of augmented reality” by taking advantage of holograms and the headset worn by users. The headset, by the way, doesn’t look all that ridiculous, and looks no bigger than the Oculus Rift.

Microsoft sees a lot of potential use cases for its Holographic headset—not just in gaming or for home use. The company specifically mentioned architects walking around potential designs, or astronauts roaming around different planets. Imagine what kind of possible education programs developers could create. Experience the signing of the Declaration of Independence first-hand, or walk around prehistoric times when dinosaurs ruled the Earth.