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XREAL’s $299 glasses just gave casual AR buyers a much easier way in

X By XREAL are AR’s new budget troublemaker

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X by XREAL with different front frames
XREAL

XREAL is finally making AR glasses a little less intimidating. The company’s new X By XREAL (AKA xbx) was just announced as a more accessible sub-brand aimed at people who want the big-screen experience without diving straight into premium hardware.

The brand’s first product is the a01, which is a pair of lightweight AR glasses that are available in China now, while the US launch is expected to kick off in July for a starting price tag of $299.

Are AR glasses finally having their budget-mainstream moment?

The pricing is easily one of the most interesting aspects of the a01. In their official announcement, X By XREAL compared it to the iPhone SE, and some even referred to it as the “MacBook Neo of AR glasses,” which is a pretty useful way to look at it. This product is just trying to be approachable AR glasses to make the category easier to enter.

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XREAL’s new xbx a01 weighs just 62 grams, making it the lightest frame in its category. It uses a 1600-nit HDR10 ultra-bright display, supports 14 brightness levels, and has dual-layer MicroOLED panels with a dedicated image enhancement chip. You also get 1.07 billion colors, global real-time AI SDR-to-HDR conversion, and a 50-degree field of view, which XREAL says is equivalent to a 147-inch screen from four meters away.

Cheap, but not boring

The a01 also has a bit more personality than the usual black-glasses-with-cables formula. XREAL is using a semi-transparent body and interchangeable front frames, so users can swap the look depending on mood or style. The company even says tinkerers can 3D print their own front-frame accessories.

But there are some compromises, of course. a01 does not have camera-based 3DoF tracking; instead, it uses software-driven stabilization and anti-shake. The company’s press material says the spatial anti-shake algorithm is built to keep the image stable during commutes, flights, and high-speed rail rides without blurring details or washing out colors.

This isn’t exactly an Apple Vision Pro competitor, but it can function as a pocket cinema for phones, handheld consoles, laptops, and travel. for $299, this is a much easier sell as well.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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