This week, the US Patent Office awarded Harman a patent for a "mobile speaker system for virtual reality environments." (As you might remember, Harman is the company Samsung acquired for $8 billion in 2017.) According to the patent, the company would map VR soundscapes to robotic speakers, which would either drive or fly (thanks to quadcopters) to better represent the distance, direction and movement of sounds.

Today, most VR headsets rely on headphones to create 3D audio that only gives the illusion of a sound's location or movement. Harman wouldn't do away with headphones altogether. The patent notes that they might be useful for internal monologues, but that this new system might make conversations, for instance, more realistic. And the idea applies more to public, group VR experiences than it does to using your own headset at home, which is good considering consumers might not be ready for a room in their house full of moving speakers.

Of course, companies patent wild ideas all the time, and it doesn't mean we'll ever see this one come to fruition. But this does give us a sense of Harman's ingenuity. If it's going to take off, they'll have to make sure the speakers themselves are silent -- a fleet of drones moving around you as you follow a VR storyline sounds pretty distracting.