Skip to main content

I don’t want Apple to announce its VR headset

Apple’s 2023 Worldwide Developer Conference (WWDC) is rapidly approaching, and I’m starting to get a rather unpleasant pain in my wallet. The long-rumored Apple Reality Pro VR/AR headset is apparently going to be revealed during the event’s keynote, and I’ve got a terrible feeling I’m not going to be able to resist it.

Why? Because Apple makes great products, I’m sure it’s going to be presented exceptionally well, and I’m doubly sure I’m exactly the person it’ll be targeting. It’s not a good combination, and I worry the only thing that’s going to stop me from potentially handing over $3,000 for one is for Apple not to announce it at all.

Take the exciting concept of AR and VR …

A rendering of an Apple mixed-reality headset (Reality Pro) in a gold color seen from the front.
Apple headset render Ahmed Chenni, Freelancer.com

What has me so fired up about Apple’s so-called Reality Pro headset? In my mind, it’s going to be the realization of a sci-fi dream I’ve long chased, and that the industry so far has repeatedly fumbled. I love the concept of augmented reality, where digital information and real life converge right before my eyes. And it’s not just for the usefulness of such tech, but it’s also the way it would make me feel. In movies from Robocop to Iron Man, screens overlaying information in helmets and visors were the tools of superheroes, changing your reality to make you more than human — and it always looked so cool.

I bought Google Glass because, at the time, it was the closest we’d come to a usable personal head-up display (HUD). I also adored its sci-fi look, the sounds it made through the bone-conduction speaker, and that it was truly a new product type. In those early days, I also bought Samsung’s Gear VR and eventually Google’s Daydream View headset, plus I attended as many related events and demonstrations as I could — from controlling Google Glass with my mind to virtually scaling Mount Everest —  so I could see how this incredible tech was shaping up. I even bought Snapchat Spectacles, despite not really using Snapchat.

Google Glass Store
Andy Boxall/Digital Trends

It felt like the future had arrived, but just as quickly, it all fizzled out. Google Glass died for consumers in a firestorm of privacy issues, I personally hated Snapchat (and the Spectacles looked silly on me), and most VR headsets still haven’t evolved into viable mainstream products. The promise of products like Jins MemeMagic Leap, and North’s Focals never really materialized either. Google recently managed to remind me why I love this kind of tech with its incredible real-time language translation using augmented reality glasses, but outside of this, I’ve just settled down with PlayStation VR (and more recently, PlayStation VR2). But the dream has never really gone away, and that’s where Apple comes in.

… add Apple’s sales technique…

Tim Cook unveiling the iPhone 13 at Apple's California Streaming event in September 2021.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Apple is a sales master. It’s adept at presenting its products in a way that’s exciting and enticing, showing you how amazing something looks, how it’ll so simply fit into your life, and crucially, how it will enhance it. It doesn’t matter if that product isn’t “new” in the industry or even if it’s that different from an older version — Apple is better at showing you what can be done with it in a way other brands simply can’t match. It then backs up the marketing claims with quality hardware, superb software, and simple usability.

Augmented reality, virtual reality, and the metaverse are ripe for Apple’s sales technique. There are use cases for all of them, but they aren’t presented in a cohesive, complete form to encourage normal people to try them out. The hardware is usually challenging, awkward, or ugly. It often requires technical expertise or specific tools to get the most from the product, or has social issues attached that turn people off. No single company has brought everything fun and interesting about this technology together, then packaged it in a way that’s appealing to the public yet.

Metaverse Concept From Meta Video Showing Student Holding Biological Cell in their Hands
Image used with permission by copyright holder

If any brand can make augmented reality, mixed reality, the metaverse, virtual reality, or whatever it’ll call the environment used by the Reality Pro headset understandable and tempting enough that the everyday person can see the benefits, it’s Apple. And if any person is ready, open, and willing enough to be sold on a brand new AR headset that’ll see my sci-fi fantasies come true, it’s me. The fact that it’s supposed to cost $3,000 will be a trifling nonissue if it does its job well — and that’s not good at all.

… and you’ve got a recipe for success

A rendering of four Apple mixed-reality headsets (Reality Pro) in various colors sitting on a surface.
Ahmed Chenni, Freelancer.com

I’m fully aware this makes me sound like the quintessential Apple fanboy. I make no secret that I use an iPhone, a MacBook, a Mac mini, an Apple Watch, and an iPad every day. Quite apart from it being my job, it’s also because they’re good products. It also means that I’m ready and willing to spend money on Apple products, and because I also know the Reality Pro will work well with other devices I own — always a high point of Apple’s ecosystem  — I’ll further be able to justify it in my mind as it’s sure to augment my other Apple products along with my reality.

I’m at the point where if there was a preorder button on Apple’s website today, I’d probably press it. That I feel this way is a good thing; it means the prospect of seeing something new in AR and VR is still exciting to me, and I’ve not been jaded by years of being disappointed by tech demos, half-finished products, and broken promises. I really want the Reality Pro to be the product I, and the entire VR industry, have been waiting for, and I want it to eventually make everything to do with virtual and augmented reality mainstream.

It’s becoming quite clear I have no willpower, and not even the fact that I’ve bought into previous attempts at making AR/VR a thing, only to be subsequently disappointed, can put me off. It’s going to take Apple to either completely mess up the presentation, fail to show any real-world benefits, make it solely for development or enterprise use, or to not announce it at all for me to not spend an insane amount of money on its headset in the near future.

You’ve almost got me, Apple, and I can’t wait to see if you can close the deal.

Editors' Recommendations

Andy Boxall
Senior Mobile Writer
Andy is a Senior Writer at Digital Trends, where he concentrates on mobile technology, a subject he has written about for…
The 6 biggest announcements from Apple’s iPhone 15 event
Invite for Apple's September 2023 event.

Apple Event - September 12

Every year brings something new, and that's doubly true for smartphones. Summer is on the way out, and while the retreat of the sun is bad news for many, there's a bright silver lining on this cloud: The release of the Apple iPhone 15. Apple has brought the basic iPhones into line with the Pro models, giving even the cheapest flagship models access to the Dynamic Island and the design refresh that we loved in last year's Pro iPhones. But that isn't all, as the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max were also revealed, with improvements of their own.

Read more
This one thing Apple didn’t fix with the iPhone 15 Pro has me struggling to upgrade
List of iPhone 15 Pro features at the September 2023 Apple Event.

Apple laid out its pitch for the new iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Pro in its usual slick, perfectly manicured fashion. It's easy to get to the end and think, "wow, they thought of everything this year!" ... but with just a couple minutes of reflection you start to realize what they tactfully chose to omit. This year, disappointingly, that was battery life.

In its full 85-minute presentation, Apple didn't boast about the battery life on any of the four iPhones it introduced, even the big-screened iPhone 15 Plus and iPhone 15 Pro Max. Just to double-check, I went over to Apple's comparison tool to look at the numbers:

Read more
Apple just announced the iPhone 15 Pro. Was it worth the wait?
Side rail of iPhone 15 Pro.

It's the dawn of a new era for Apple smartphones, and heralding the change are Apple's latest flagships, the iPhone 15 Pro and its 15 Pro Max variant. These two phones get a blazing-fast processor, a switch to more premium materials, and — most importantly— a USB-C port instead of the usual Lightning connector. The premium phones were updated alongside the standard iPhone 15 and iPhone 15 Max, Apple Watch Series 9, and Apple Watch Ultra 2.

It's disappointing to see that Apple's September 2023 event didn't bring a major iPhone redesign, but this time it appears that Apple wants to focus more on internal upgrades than aesthetics.
Titanium is here, and it's beautiful
Color options for iPhone 15 Pro series Apple

Read more