Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

there There are a lot of smart glasses out there Right now, including a lot of viewing glasses, which specifically act like additional screens for your face. Xreal makes a number of them. A new range made in collaboration with Asus, the ROG Xreal R1, will arrive from June. It has a better refresh rate than any other viewing glasses I’ve seen, but it’s also much more expensive for the privilege.
I tried out the ROG Xreal R1 Back in January, and while they certainly had a different, garish, “gamer” design, they were a subtly upgraded pair of toys Excelial One Pro Glasses with built-in console switching dock. The biggest unique feature of the ROG Xreal R1 is its micro-OLED display with a 240Hz refresh rate, which beats most other glasses that currently have a 120Hz refresh rate.
To activate this refresh rate, you’ll need to connect the glasses to the ROG Control Dock, which has HDMI 2 and DisplayPort 1.4 ports. The base can be used to switch between your PC and multiple gaming consoles while wearing the glasses, should you feel the need.
Watch this: Asus and Xreal just made ROG gaming glasses, and they’re smooth
My current favorite viewing glasses, Vitor’s monsterhas a better resolution (1920 x 1200) than these ROG Glasses (1920 x 1080) and is brighter than these glasses, which reach just 700 nits. It costs less ($549), although it doesn’t come with a console switch dock. Xreal’s One Pro glasses are priced at $599 and are practically identical in many respects, meaning the dock cost is $250. The ROG Glasses R1 has similar audio powered by Bose, the ability to hold a virtual display in place as you move your head and dimming photoelectric lenses, plus the One Pros’ flatter, anti-glare internal lenses.
I would prefer the ROG Xreal R1 to have better resolution or even a larger field of view. (That’s 57 degrees, just like the Xreal One Pro.) Better glasses are coming: Xreal’s own glasses Hala Projecttechnically part of a mixed reality computer package Made using Google It’s coming later this year, and has a 70-degree field of view (at an unknown price).
In this economy, the whole thing is a tough sell, to say the least. But if you’ve been dreaming of 240Hz display glasses, these are the ones.