In the year 2020, we have seen quite a progress in the AR wearables. With many AR, MR, and smart glasses already out there, and many more to come shortly, we offer you an extensive overview of the current state and the near future of cool eyewear!
This is the first edition of our AR glasses roundup including every AR/MR wearable currently on the market and coming soon. We didn't include any VR headsets. The glasses are sorted by category, and wrapped up in a table at the end of this post, including availability. If we missed something, please send us a message, and we'll include them in the next update of our roundup!
This one is a mystery: the AntVR website looks very much on business, but no information about their MIX glasses is found. When navigating to Buy now -site, the comment section hints that the company has gone silent.
The company ran through a successful Kickstarter campaign and said to have tremendous success worldwide, and is now stepping into the world of AR. Does anyone know anything about this?
Apple has been acquiring several AR companies in the resent, which suggests Apple is working on its own AR product. There have also been many Apple patents appearing recently, explaining how specially-designed lenses could cast images on a user's eye and how a touchscreen surface could be used as a controller.
With not much information, we'll stand by and wait for an update.
Unlike other AR, MR, and smart glasses out there, the Dream Glass is more targeted to the consumer market. The price is a fraction of competitors like Magic Leap and Google Glass but promises to have better-quality features.
Now, after the more than successful fundraising, we're eager to hear more from them!
The first in-sight cycling display from Garmin enhances your road awareness by putting the cycling information you want right where you want it. Stay focused while trying nailing your targets for a workout, find the next turn, or stay aware of cars approaching from behind.
View information such as your heart rate, power, and speed while keeping your eyes peeled for potential hazards in front of you. Varia Vision has detailed navigation prompts with street names, directional arrows, and distance to turn.
The Enterprise Edition device has been specially designed for enterprise, from doctors to automobile assemblers. If you're not happy with what Google has to offer, you can build your own Glasswear with Glass Explorer Edition.
Moverio BT-300 has been designed as an addition to drone technology. Weighing only 69 g, the Moverio BT-300 enables a whole new drone experience. The Epson AR glasses are great for photographers and enterprises, and with collaboration with different app developers, they are ready to take you to the future with FPV-apps.
Raptor's patented Everysight BEAMTM projection technology provides easily-accessible yet non-intrusive information. You can take HD pictures and videos with just a tap or voice command. Raptor connects to your smartphone with Bluetooth, so there is no need to pause your cycling experience for an email or to change a song on your playlist.
With a small form factor, expandable eyebox and Field of View (FoV), Extended Depth of Field (DoF), and high optical efficiency, the PinMR glasses resolve the issues consumers and AR companies have identified. Issues such as bulky form factors, narrow FoV, poor color expression, high prices, and costly and complex manufacturing.
The Meta 2 Development Kit promises virtual workspaces of the future becoming a reality today. The high-resolution projections of Meta 2, in connection with the interfaces to Unity 3D and SOLIDWORKS, enable the three-dimensional display of 3D and CAD models amid the real world. With intuitive hand-gesture control, the users can also interact with these holograms in real-time.
The purpose of Meta 2 is to be used in testing and development, rather than for public usage. The Meta 2 is capable of real-time tracking and mapping of spaces, meaning the users can lock their content in 3D space.
Focals by North were among the most awaited AR glasses until Google acquired the company in July 2020. The production of Focals was ceased, and no further info about their future is revealed.
The company states that with Google, they will continue their work to blend technology seamlessly into our world: immediately accessible when you want it, but hidden away when you don't. So, nothing else to do than wait for the info of what's to come.
Photos and videos wirelessly sync to your smartphone, where you can edit and transform them, and then share them anywhere you want. The new Spectacles 3 even allows you to explore the underwater world.
The dynaEdge AR100 offers various methods to input and navigate, including a touchpad and programmable buttons on the HMD and directional buttons on the waist-mounted mobile mini PC, as well as voice and gesture capabilities.
The second, LOC.31, does basically the same, but with monocular optical see-through HMD. The LOC.31 comes in a variety of mounting options (helmet, headband) or a camera adaptation.
The Vivo AR Glass supports dual-screen display and 6DoF technology. The users can experience a range of applications such as mobile office, AR games, 3D high-definition video, facial recognition, and object recognition when connected to a 5G smartphone. Once the Vivo AR Glass projects the content, the 5G smartphone will then act as the control to switch and select applications.
Vuzix Blade is built for industrial operations and is designed for all-day comfort. Waveguide optics project real-time content for seamless integration of the digital and the real world.
The glasses feature HD camera, noise-canceling mics, wireless WiFi, UV protection lenses, dual haptic feedback, multilingual voice control, and MicroSD expansion.
The Action One glasses promise to give natural interaction between reality, virtuality, and users. The user controls the glasses either with a controller, gestures, or voice command. Action One is available for purchase by contacting the company's customer service via email.
Their most exciting product line is Visualize framework, which is not actually a product. It's a framework that equips developers with a starter hardware platform to create XR experiences.
The very first glasses built within the Visualizing framework is the v1 glasses. It is optimized to take advantage of the latest technological advances and provides developers with a full, customizable AOSP/OpenXR-compatible dev system.
Magic Leap 1 scans and understands the world around you, can remember where you last put things and recognizes and responds to your head position and eye movement. Also, with accurate hand tracking, you can point, shake, fist bump, and even work on your tennis serve.
HoloLens 2 is primarily meant for businesses to better their collaborations.
Nreal Light is a pair of mixed reality glasses sporting a wide-screen, vivid display. By offering a full spatial computing capability and cross-platform compatibility, Nreal strives to bring mixed reality a step closer to reality.
Nreal MR glasses are available to pre-order for developers, and coming soon to consumers as well.
Rokid offers two pairs of glasses: Rokid Vision for mobile usage and Rokid Glass 2 designed for multi-use scenarios. Roughly said, Rokid Vision is for consumer-like usage when Rokid Glass 2 is aimed at enterprises.
Designed for enterprise use, the X2 comes with environment tracking, wide field of view, noise-canceling microphones, and high-resolution camera, to name a few features. The X2 MR glasses run on the open-source Android OS.
XR-1 Developer Edition is powered by pass-through technology, which is achieved with cameras, sensors, optics, ISP, and Varjo's Bionic Display™.
Meet Echo Frames - all-day glasses with hands-free access to Alexa. These smart glasses are in the introductory period and are available only through an invitation. They are also shipped only in 50 states in the US.
With the Amazon Echo Frames, you can make calls, set reminders, add to your to-do lists, listen to podcasts, or control your smart home from anywhere. They also support Google Assistant and Siri. Echo Frames are designed for every-day-use; they are lightweight and compatible with most prescription lenses. Built-in-microphones respond to the voice of the person wearing the frames, so your privacy is safe.
These industry-targeted smart safety glasses give unrestricted field of view, zoom in to the smallest details, and make sure no radiation near your temple. They also feel and look like a standard pair of glasses!
The Level glasses work together with the Level app, available for free in the App Store and Google Play. With the app, you can easily track your activity, build momentum towards your goals, and - the one feature all of us four-eyes long for - find your glasses!
The glasses are available in three frames. You can purchase yours from multiple stores in the US and online.
Used together with Smith Focus App, the eyewear records and visualizes your activity and progress. The combination then offers a program for improved performance and ultimately aids in targeting your goals and objectives for excelling in a sport or combating daily stressors.
Lowdown Focus is paving its way into the wellness field, unlike many other AR/MR/smart glasses. They for sure have a place in the world of information overload.
With Loud Slim and Loud Youth, you can attach prescription lenses. The Loud XL is the perfect frame for outdoor use.
The ORA-2 is equipped with a dual-core processor, camera, microphone, sound, inertial sensors, WiFi, Bluetooth, GPS, ambient light sensor, and a high capacity rechargeable battery.
With the combination of the Solos app and the smart glasses, you can hit your performance thresholds, find your next turn, see who's calling, or get your latest social feed update.
Vue's bone conduction audio technology transfers stereo sound to your inner ear. Your ears remain unplugged, so you can listen to music, answer calls, and hear notifications while still hearing the world around you.
The starter kits feature a touchpad, voice and button navigations, WiFi, Bluetooth and GPS, OLED displays, flashlight, and camera. The M4000 features, among the previous, head tracking, see-through Waveguide optics, integrated speaker, and noise-cancelling microphones.
AntVR MIX | Launched on Kickstarter |
Apple Glasses | On its way |
Dream Glass 4K | Available for all |
Garmin Varia Vision | Available for all |
Google Glass Enterprise Edition 2 | Enterprise |
Epson MOVERIO BT-300 | Available for all |
Everysight Raptor | Available for all |
LetinAR PinMR | On-demand, lens samples coming in 2020 |
Meta 2 | Development |
North Focals | Not available / acquired by Google |
Snap Spectacles | Available for all |
Toshiba dynaEdge AR100 Viewer | Development |
Trivisio | Enterprise |
Vivo AR Glass | On its way |
Vuzix Blade | Available for all |
Action One | Available |
Digilens | Development |
Magic Leap | Development, enterprice |
Microsoft Hololens 2 | Available for all |
Nreal Light | Development, pre-orders available |
Rokid | Available for all |
ThirdEye X2 | Enterprise |
Varjo XR 1 | Development |
Amazon Echo Frames | Invitations only |
Iristick | Available for all |
Level | Available for all |
Lowdown Focus | Available for all |
Lucyd Loud | Coming on September 2020 |
Optivent ORA-2 | Available for all, designed for enterprise |
Solos | For ambassadors, retailers, developers |
Vue | Available for all |
Vuzix M-Series | Enterprise |
If you know of AR/MR/smart glasses not presented here, please let us know, and we'll add them to the group!
Read more about what is augmented reality.