Virtual events have moved well past the “glorified Zoom call” era. Today, immersive virtual event production sits at the intersection of technology, design, and audience psychology.
So let’s start with the word everyone is using, because it means more than most providers let on.
What “immersive” actually means in virtual event production
Immersive virtual events don’t just look better — they make attendees feel present, engaged, and genuinely reluctant to leave.
The technologies making that possible in 2026 include 3D navigable environments, XR stages, spatial audio networking, simulive production, and gamification layers that turn passive watching into active participation.
| Technology | What it delivers | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 3D Virtual Environments | Navigable lobbies, booths, auditoriums | Trade shows, expos, job fairs |
| XR / LED Volume Stages | Cinematic broadcast-quality backdrops | Keynotes, product launches |
| Spatial Audio Networking | Proximity-based conversation clusters | Conferences, team events |
| Gamification Layers | Leaderboards, challenges, scavenger hunts | Marketing events, community events |
| Simulive Production | Pre-recorded content delivered as live | Large-scale multi-track conferences |
| Custom Branded Environments | Full visual identity embedded in platform | Brand-driven corporate events |
The platform creates the possibility; the production team creates the experience.
That distinction is really what separates the providers worth considering from the ones worth skipping.
Top immersive virtual event production services: an honest breakdown
The market breaks into three categories, and each one solves a genuinely different problem, so knowing which you actually need saves a lot of time.
1. Platform-first providers
Platform-first providers give you the environment. vFairs leads the 3D navigable category, replicating the “walking the floor” feel for trade shows and job fairs.
6Connex targets enterprise-scale events with deep gamification and customizable 3D venues. Airmeet (AirStudio) adds light production features to a networking-forward platform.
Remo and Gather work well for social and team-building events, with spatial audio and avatar movement creating genuine informal connection at smaller scales.
2. Specialist technology providers
Specialist technology providers sit in a different lane entirely. ARwall produces LED XR stage installations for cinema-grade keynotes and product launches.
SOFTMACHINE focuses on fulldome and projection mapping for science communication and complex storytelling events, serious specialists for specific needs.
3. Full-service production partners
Full-service production partners own the outcome with you, and that’s where we sit at We & Goliath.
If you’re looking for a deeper strategy around audience engagement, ROI attribution, and post-event follow-up systems that extend your impact long after the event ends, We & Goliath was built for exactly that.
Our team works across every format, from virtual to hybrid to in-person, with the SMART Event Method combining data-driven strategy, broadcast-quality production, and integrated marketing to turn your events into measurable business results, whatever your goals.
How the options compare
The table below reflects where each provider genuinely excels, which matters more than where they claim to compete.
| Provider | Best for | Production depth | Immersion type | Scale |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| We & Goliath | Conferences, associations, corporate | Full broadcast | Design-led + interactivity | All scales |
| vFairs | Trade shows, job fairs | Platform features | 3D navigation | Mid to large |
| ARwall | Keynotes, product launches | XR stage specialist | Visual spectacle | Mid to large |
| 6Connex | Enterprise hybrid | Platform features | 3D + gamification | Large |
| SOFTMACHINE | Science, storytelling | Projection specialist | Dome/projection | Niche |
| Airmeet | Networking events | Light production | Interactive layouts | Small to mid |
| Remo / Gather | Team events, social | Minimal | Spatial audio | Small |
For a navigable 3D trade show floor, vFairs or 6Connex belong at the top of your list. For cinema-grade visual production, ARwall is the specialist.
What’s worth pausing on, though, is that choosing the right provider type is only half the decision. The other half is knowing which mistakes tend to cost the most.
What most buyers get wrong
These are the five patterns we see repeatedly with organizations who’ve been burned before, and they’re almost always avoidable.
- Conflating platform features with production quality. A 3D lobby means nothing if the livestream looks like a video call. Ask to see actual event recordings, not marketing demos.
- Ignoring post-event content. A well-produced event keeps working through replays, social clips, and highlight reels for weeks. Post-event reach is part of what production means.
- Underestimating speaker support. Virtual speakers without backstage coaching and technical rehearsal are the most common cause of immersion breakdown. Speaker prep is production, not an optional add-on.
- Choosing on features alone. The most immersive platform in the world can’t compensate for weak production. The team, not the tool, determines whether your event feels premium or forgettable.
- Treating branding as an afterthought. Brand identity belongs in every visual layer: intros, outros, lower thirds, transitions, holding slides, and sponsor placements. Events that get this right feel like a premium production from the first frame; events that don’t feel like borrowed templates, and that gap shows up directly in how much coordination lands back on your team.
Platform-centric vs. production-centric: the real trade-off
Platform-centric production returns most of the creative and technical work to you. Full-service production absorbs that complexity and returns a finished experience.
| Platform-centric | Production-centric (We & Goliath) | |
|---|---|---|
| Visual immersion | Feature-dependent, variable | Engineered, consistent |
| Brand integration | Template-based | Custom, senior design-led |
| Speaker experience | Self-managed | Coached and supported |
| Post-event content | Often manual or absent | Included, managed |
| Vendor coordination | Multiple vendors | Single integrated team |
| Technical risk | Higher (self-managed) | Lower (white-glove support) |
| Setup time | Tens of hours, DIY | Streamlined via agency processes |
| ROI visibility | Fragmented, manual | Unified attribution, post-event follow-up systems included |
The difference in practice is the gap between an event attendees describe as "the best virtual event they've attended" and one they quietly multitask through.
If you want to get a clear read on which side any provider will land on, a short list of honest questions goes a long way.
Questions worth asking any immersive production partner
- Can you show me a recording of a recent event, not a highlight reel?
- Who handles speaker prep, and how many rehearsals are included?
- What happens when something breaks live?
- How is branding integrated beyond the registration page?
- What does post-event content delivery look like?
- Who is the single point of contact on event day?
We’re happy to walk through all of these in a free strategy session and show you real events, real numbers, and real client feedback.
Those answers come from treating immersive production as the starting point, not the finish line.
Ready to see what’s possible for your event?
The most valuable thing you can do before booking any platform or production crew is get a clear strategy in place.
Our event strategy session delivers platform recommendations, format guidance, and a production roadmap in roughly two hours, saving weeks of evaluation and helping you avoid the coordination failures that make virtual events feel harder than they need to be.