Viture Unveils 'Beast' AR Glasses with Micro-OLED Display, Advanced Features at Competitive Price

July 12, 2025
Viture Unveils 'Beast' AR Glasses with Micro-OLED Display, Advanced Features at Competitive Price
  • Despite a resolution of 1080p, the display's clarity and color quality are exceptional, making it the best screen in AR glasses according to Viture.

  • The Viture Beast is priced at $549, making it competitive in the market, especially since it costs $100 less than the Xreal One Pro, with four models launching in October 2025.

  • Viture justifies branding the glasses as '4K-like' by noting that users often mistake the display for 4K, although it actually has a 1200p resolution, which is 50% sharper than their previous model.

  • The glasses include a USB-C port for charging, marking a shift away from proprietary connectors to enhance user convenience.

  • Although weighing 88 grams—twice as much as Meta's Ray-Bans—the Beast glasses claim to offer quadruple the capabilities, emphasizing their advanced feature set.

  • The glasses feature a 58-degree field of view, with the slight difference from the listed 60 degrees being negligible in practical use.

  • Viture has announced the 'Beast,' a new pair of AR glasses featuring a 58-degree field of view and a micro-OLED display, aiming to deliver high-quality visuals.

  • Equipped with Harman-tuned audio, electrochromic dimming, 1,280 nits brightness, and a depth sensor, the Beast glasses are packed with advanced features for spatial computing and immersive experiences.

  • The Viture Beast offers built-in screen customization with 3DoF tracking, with plans to add 6DoF tracking later, providing flexible user interaction.

  • The glasses retail at $549, while a higher-end Luma series targeting enterprise users will be available at $600, with pre-orders expected in October.

  • While the author is excited to test the glasses for entertainment and productivity, they advise those needing myopia adjustments to consider other options, as the model lacks hardware myopia adjustment dials.

  • The absence of hardware myopia adjustment dials was a trade-off for improved tracking accuracy, which may be a concern for some users.

Summary based on 2 sources


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