Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

The Meta Quest just got an awesome new VR accessory

Add as a preferred source on Google
A person uses a Logitech MX Ink to scuplt in 3D with a Meta Quest 3
Logitech

Logitech has announced its first piece of hardware in the VR space, a stylus that lets you draw and paint in 3D on the Meta Quest 3. The MX Ink Stylus is a familiar-looking sketching tool that works hand in hand with the Quest controller to drastically expand the capabilities of the popular Quest 3 VR headset.

The MX Ink also works with the Quest Pro and Quest 2 and supports several painting and sculpting Quest apps, including Gravity Sketch, PaintingVR, OpenBrush, ShapesXR, GestureVR, Arkio, and Engage XR. If you connect your Quest to a VR-ready PC, you can use the MX Ink Stylus with Adobe’s Substance Modeler and Elucis by Realize Medical.

Recommended Videos

While you can use a Meta Quest controller for drawing, painting, and sculpting, a stylus makes more sense and should feel much more natural in the hand. Logitech is a leading computer accessory manufacturer, and its Bluetooth keyboards, trackpads, and mice already work with the Meta’s VR headsets, bringing the Quest 3 closer to serving as a laptop replacement.

Logitech gave the MX Ink Stylus a replaceable, pressure-sensitive tip with adjustable pressure curves, allowing for artistic nuance when drawing in 2D. Logitech offers the MX Mat as a nice drawing surface. The stylus includes haptics to provide feedback and simulate drawing on different surfaces.

A person uses a Logitech MX Ink to draw in 2D with a Meta Quest 3.
An artist sketches on a 2D surface with the MX Ink Stylus and Meta Quest 3. Logitech

Unlike a standard digital art stylus, you can also rotate, lift, and move this virtual pencil anywhere in space with 6 degrees of freedom. You can even trace over physical objects in mixed reality to create a virtual representation quickly.

The MX Ink’s buttons are customizable with adjustable activation force and double-tap timing. The MX Ink Well is a charging base that keeps the stylus topped up and ready to use whenever inspiration strikes.

Logitech's MX Ink Stylus and MX Ink Well charging base appear on a white background.
The Logitech MX Ink Stylus shown with the MX Ink Well charging base. Logitech

It sounds like a thoughtfully designed solution for a growing number of VR artists and designers, but we can’t know for sure until we’ve tried it out for ourselves later this year.

The Logitech MX Ink Stylus will be available at Meta Connect in September, possibly alongside a new Quest 3s headset, and will cost $130.

Alan Truly
Alan Truly is a Writer at Digital Trends, covering computers, laptops, hardware, software, and accessories that stand out as…
Apple’s M6 chip isn’t even here yet, but you’ll see M7 Macs early in 2027
Apple is reportedly already accelerating its next-generation silicon roadmap, even before the M6 has launched.
Apple MacBook

The M6 chip is still expected to debut later this year, but Apple may already be preparing for what comes next. According to Mark Gurman's latest report for Bloomberg, the company is aiming to introduce its first M7-powered devices as early as the first half of 2027, hinting at a much faster silicon refresh than many expected.

M7 could arrive alongside new Macs and iPads

Read more
The entry-level MacBook Pro could get a design refresh in 2027, and it’s about time
Five years on the same chassis, and now both tiers of the MacBook Pro are getting a new look at once.
MacBook Pro in space grey sitting on a desk.

Apple has a new MacBook Pro lined up for launch early next year, according to Bloomberg. The company will introduce a 14-inch laptop in the first half of 2027. 

The biggest surprise, however, will be a brand-new design language. The outlet describes it as "a revamped entry-level MacBook Pro, code-named K104."

Read more
Study finds humans will talk to AI ghosts of the dead as reincarnations, and it’s pretty grim
The first AI ghost study is in. The results are about as complicated as you'd expect.
VR Headset, Person, Face

A new study from the University of Colorado Boulder confirms something that sounds both impressive and concerning. People find interacting with AI simulations of their dead loved ones deeply meaningful, and most will come away wanting to do it again.

The researchers call it a "generative ghost," which is a clear reference to generative AI, but I’d still prefer to call it unsettling.

Read more