👓 Elevate Your Reality with VITURE Pro XR!
The VITURE Pro XR/AR Glasses offer a groundbreaking 135” UltraClarity display with a 120Hz refresh rate and peak brightness of 4000 nits. Designed for both gamers and professionals, these glasses feature myopia adjustments, electrochromic film for light blocking, and a durable construction, ensuring an immersive experience across various devices.
Color | Black |
Band Color | Black |
Style Name | Modern |
Item Shape | Oval |
Compatible Devices | Smartphone, Tablet, Gaming Console, PC, MAC |
Resolution | 1920 x 1080 per eye |
Maximum Display Brightness | 4E+3 Nit |
Display Type | LCD |
Screen Size | 135 Inches |
Item Dimensions | 6.3 x 1.85 x 2.13 inches |
Warranty Type | Standard/Full |
Communication Feature | Wireless, Wired |
Wireless Compability | Bluetooth |
Wireless Provider | NET |
Connectivity Technology | USB |
Human-Interface Input | Buttons |
Supported Satellite Navigation System | GPS |
Controller Type | Button Control |
Case Material Type | Resin or Metal |
Water Resistance Level | Not Water Resistant |
Sport Type | Walking, Cycling, Baseball, Run |
Closure Type | Buckle |
Operating System | iOS, Android,macOS, Windows, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation, XBox |
Additional Features | 3DoF, VR Videos, Multiple Screens, Spatial Video/ Spatial Photo, Adjustable Electrochromic Film |
GPS Geotagging Functionality | No GPS |
Band Material Type | Silicone |
F**R
Oh man, selling my Quest 3!
I received these vr glasses just a couple of days ago. Today, I sold my Quest 3... yeah, they're that good! Here's the thing that matters most—it just works! Plug it in, and BAM!! I run on an iPhone 16 and a MacBook Air M1. Everything works perfect, no hiccups. Thing is, I liked my Quest 3, but I felt like I was looking through the windows of a submarine. No matter how good people said the FOV was, I was still turning my head this way and that—squinting my eyes. I have a secret for ya... These Vitures allow you to make all the adjustments you need for a perfectly crisp display with edge-to-edge clarity -- no blurriness whatsoever. And the immersive 3D is amazing!!! I just watched the junkyard fight scene from Superman 3 in incredible 3d. Whoa! :-| ... The only 3D movie that ever worked for my eyes was Captain EO back in the 80s. Since then, I developed some weird issue where my eyes just see things from different focal points. I see perfectly clear, but 3D movies just didn't work on my eyes with the glasses provided by the theater. Well, with Viture XR Pro's adjusters... holy crap!!! I can see in enhanced 3D! I'm reaching out to grab things like all the folks I thought were crazy when watching Avatar. So, yeah -- get these babies! A lot of people try to argue that XREAL Ones are better, nope. I've tried them. Not to mention, they look ridiculous. These Vitures can be worn in Starbucks without turning a single head—if you're good at hiding the wire. Serious, these rock!
W**N
Painfully Close to Perfect with a Fatal Flaw
The media could not be loaded. Summary:What I wanted: A wearable computer monitor/TV. I basically got that. Just not as wide an input support as would make them perfect. Don't expect clear text near the edges of the display.Why I wanted it: Video gaming and having a computer monitor that fits in a pocket. Mostly got that too. What these are NOT: Virtual reality glasses. Augmented reality glasses.Full Review:--------------The Fit: 5/5I have a slightly wider than average face. These glasses are a bit tight to put on initially, but relax into a good position once you grapple them around your skull. My discomfort was momentary. There is enough give in the opposite direction on the hinges that for me the comfort is excellent after the initial push to get them in place. They rest securely but do not squeeze. I'm certain they could be shaken off, but not casually. Overall ergonomics feel very good once they're at rest. No sharp bits, no uncomfortable seams anywhere that rests on skin. Bizarrely lightweight. Connecting cable is in a fantastic place to stay out of the way. Very comfy.Appearance: 2/5The glasses have a thick, satin finish black plastic appearance. Not shiny or particularly dull. Fingerprints from handling the frame do show, but only from close up and under angles of light normally reserved for inspection. I'm unsure what the material of the shell is, but feels like plastic. The electrochromic lenses work fantastically. Honestly, a super cool feature. No need for a lens cover. They go from just lighter than sunglass darkness to what seems like welding goggles dark immediately on power-up. This can be toggled with a small button on the left frame. I used these exclusively in well-lit rooms and had zero trouble with light interfering with the picture. Kind of ugly, but not what I got them for.Display: 4/5These were almost perfect. A sharp image where individual pixels are actually fairly difficult to pick out. Nice and bright colors with a built in brightness adjustment rocker button. Deep blacks. I used it at a little less than half brightness and it's excellent there--bright and crisp as a 30 inch monitor 3 feet from my face. My eyes remaining relaxed the whole time. Top and bottom of the image are nice and sharp almost all the way across. The adjustment knobs for myopia are nice and sensitive, very granular! But there's a flaw. There's always a flaw. The Viture Pro seems to be designed with a VERY narrow interpupillary distance range for best use. As far as I can tell, roughly 62-64mm or so. Mine is 67. This means the left and right edges of the otherwise amazing display are a blurry columns as the optics and my eyes are juuuust off the angle for the picture to be pixel perfect. Text in the left and right edges of the display and to a similar extent the corners are quite blurry from this distortion. Just the outside couple of inches in my illusory 30 inch monitor, but enough where reading text gets difficult. If my eyes were a few millimeters closer together it would probably work amazingly. Instead, I'm left with only above average. Unlike the knobs for individual focus per eye, there's no way to adjust this distance between the pupils at all. It's hard molded into the width and shape of the glasses themselves. It's the fatal flaw in an otherwise incredible display. I was crushed. It'll probably be what forces me to return them. If your eyes are a little closer together than mine and fall in the magic interpupillary sweet spot, you're in for an incredible treat.The rest of us should wait for the next model, where I hope they add a dial to make the glasses a little slimmer or wider so our eyes line up perfectly with the prisms.Sound: 3/5There are speakers built into the arms of the glasses, and I'll admit I was quite pleased with their ability to reproduce a relatively good sound. They do lack a bit of accuracy because they're tiny little things, but I was overall very pleased with the illusion of real speakers. It's nowhere near as tinny as I feared a speaker that small would be. It also does a pretty good job of not being clearly audible from more than just a foot or two from the glasses. You can tell there's a sound there, but not exactly what it's saying. Not bad! Volume is controlled by the volume system of the host device or computer (or steam deck in my case.)Accessories: 4/5The glasses come with a very defensive case, and their magnetic USB-C cable that makes it all work. It's not a standard wire, so keep it safe. The case does thoughtfully provide a little compartment that holds this wire inside so that you won't lose it easily unless you lost the whole thing. I appreciate little touches like that. I do ding it slightly for not molding in a convenient little spool to wind the wire around in the case, you sort of have to hand-spool it each time and it's always a little bit the wrong size and you need to do it again. There's a bit of poor placement of the interior case magnet too, it tends to let the wire bunch above it and makes it trickier to pack the case correctly. That's mostly a convenience nitpick. Also the interior material of the case seems like it would soil very easily from just human skin oil, so bear that in mind.Device Compatibility: 3/5The glasses alone are compatible with most computers that have Displayport over USB-C. This is things like most laptops, the Steam Deck and similar "game-computers" and quite a few apple devices. It does not translate to many computers that lack this ability, or similar GPU capacity in the CPU. Also essentially NO TVs without a separately sold $130 accessory the company sells. If you don't have a computer or smartphone style device to host it, it does NOTHING alone. It has no battery or power source on its own. It absolutely NEEDS to be hosted by another USB-C machine to do anything. Make sure you know that.I'll upload some various photos and a video of the electrochromic lens in action for the curious.
B**.
Genuinely fun once you think of use case scenarios for it.
Human here, hyello.So, the monitor it gives is really big. Big enough for a monitor replacement WITH THE EXCEPTION of the screen just sitting a little low in my field of vision.If you're smart, and have remote desktop running on your cellphone, and have a bluetooth mouse and keyboard, you can easily have a productive workplace anywhere you want. Streams straight from whatever you're using, it's a really nice refresh rate. No flickers.But you still need to position it on your nose if you want to see your very bottom of the screen. About the width of the start bar, really. Edges in your field of vision are, as with many devices, a little less focused than the center of your field of vision, but the dials to adjust your eyesight are for each eye, and that's pretty freakin' sick. Didn't even need custom inserts to use it.Speaking of, they make prescription inserts for looking through your monitor at other things, if you are one to move around with a monitor in the center of your field of vision, which isn't actually as bad as it sounds. If you make your background black, it's transparent, and you only see a floating cursor in your field of vision. Neat.That said, audio's great. It connects to damn near anything. If I use the charging power dongle splitter thing, my cellphone (s24 ultra) doesn't even lose battery life. I can sit at a park and ignore it to play videogames via Steam Link if I want. I can be obnoxious and ignore my friends with more power and flexibility not seen since I slapped a Quest 3 on my face and ran Virtual Desktop.Right temple gets slightly warm, but not hot.
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