These XR glasses gave me a 174-inch screen to work with - and a shockingly wide field of view
Briefly

These XR glasses gave me a 174-inch screen to work with - and a shockingly wide field of view
"Compared to the Viture Luma Pro I tried in July 2025, the Beast comes in at $50 more, with up to a 174-inch screen, 58-degree FoV (versus 52 degrees on the Luma Pro), increased brightness to 1,250 nits, aluminum material around the lenses, dynamic tint control, a microphone, and integrated screen customization controls right on the glasses themselves. The connection also moves to USB-C instead of a magnetic connector."
"Three positioning modes are available: spatial anchor, smooth follow, and 0DoF. The default is 0DoF, where your content stays centered to your view. Smooth follow is probably my least used mode, where the screen follows head movement slowly in order to minimize sudden motions. Spatial anchor locks the screen in space so you can look around the virtual space to see what is going on in the surrounding area."
The Beast offers a 58-degree field of view, up to a 174-inch virtual screen, and increased brightness to 1,250 nits. Onboard aluminum controls provide integrated screen customization, a microphone, dynamic electrochromic tint with nine dimming levels, and USB-C connectivity. The design removes myopia diopter dials in favor of prescription inserts as needed. Audio reproduces clearly through the glasses, and an on-screen menu reduces dependence on the SpaceWalker app. Three positioning modes—0DoF, smooth follow, and spatial anchor—allow content to stay centered, follow head movement slowly, or lock the screen in space. Accessory compatibility includes the Viture Pro Mobile Dock, Pro Neckband (Android-only), and 8BitDo controller.
Read at ZDNET
Unable to calculate read time
[
|
]