McCauley began his professional career at the U.S. Department of Defense. McCauley designed many of the guitar and drum peripherals for the
Guitar Hero video game series. McCauley created the hardware for early Guitar Hero guitars by
reverse-engineering the guitars used in the
Konami game
Guitar Freaks. He also designed hardware peripherals for
Silent Scope and
EA Sports Active 2.
Oculus VR McCauley joined
Oculus VR as vice president of engineering in August 2012, shortly after the company raised millions of dollars on Kickstarter for their first development kit. He served as VP Engineering at Oculus until March 2014 when the company was acquired by
Facebook for $2 billion. He left Oculus immediately after the acquisition was completed. He claims to have donated all the money he received from the Facebook buyout to charity. While at Oculus, he designed test equipment and managed
China-based manufacturing of the
Oculus DK1 and
DK2, the company's development hardware that was shipped to game developers years before the 2016 release of their consumer product, the
Oculus Rift.
Lucid VR In 2017, McCauley joined Lucid VR as Chief Engineer to lead worldwide manufacturing of their flagship virtual and augmented reality camera, the VR180 LucidCam.
Inventions, credits, and accomplishments McCauley worked on creating audio effects; computer peripherals; game controllers; light gun technology; composite HID USB device for gaming; and guitar and drum controllers for the Guitar Hero franchise. ==Philanthropy==