Skip to main content

Xreal’s new device enables Vision Pro features on smart glasses

Xreal Air 2 Ultra with Beam Pro lets you use your hands to interact with virtual content
Xreal Air 2 Ultra with Beam Pro lets you use your hands to interact with virtual content. Xreal

Xreal is the leading manufacturer of smart glasses with displays, with the the Xreal Air 2 Ultra even including some AR features. Now you can upgrade any model from the Xreal Air product line with the new $199 Xreal Beam Pro companion device. While the new device shares the name of the original Xreal Beam, they have quite different designs.

The first Xreal Beam was a short but chunky box that let you connect Xreal Air and Air 2 smart glasses to your iPhone. The new Beam Pro, though, looks and behaves more like a smartphone, running Android 14 and sporting a 6.5-inch LCD screen, Wi-Fi 6, 5G, and Bluetooth 5.2 connectivity. In fact, you no longer need to connect a separate phone, tablet, or computer to use your Xreal glasses.

To be clear, Xreal isn’t describing this accessory as a phone, and we don’t know if you can place and receive calls with it. However, it has 5G and can run Android apps, so it sounds a bit like a super-cheap Android phone with special features for Xreal Air smart glasses.

According to Xreal, the Beam Pro can play games from Xbox Cloud Gaming, Amazon Luna, Steam Link, and other cloud game services. The Beam Pro has two USB-C ports — one for charging and another for smart glasses. You can connect a Bluetooth game controller or wireless keyboard for productivity.

A person on a plane watches a giant virtual screen with Xreal Air 2 and Beam Pro.
A person on a plane watches a giant virtual screen with Xreal Air 2 and Beam Pro. Xreal

For entertainment, the Beam Pro works with streaming video services like Netflix, Disney+, Prime Video, and more. Just install the app from the Google Play Store like you would on an Android phone.

Xreal preloaded Nebula on the Beam Pro, so your Xreal Air smart glasses can display three virtual screens with head-tracking support. With the Xreal Air 2 Ultra, the Beam Pro can recognize hand gestures, so you can point and pinch to interact with virtual content.

The Beam Pro looks quite similar to a phone except for its dual 50MP cameras that are nicely spaced for capturing 3D videos in 1080p at 60 frames per second. The iPhone 15 Pro can record spatial videos, but the camera spacing isn’t ideal for recording three-dimensional video, so the Beam Pro has the potential to offer more depth.

The Xreal Beam Pro has two cameras to record spatial videos.
The Xreal Beam Pro has two cameras to record spatial videos. Xreal

Xreal will offer two Beam Pro configurations: one with 6GB memory and 128GB storage for $199, and another with 8GB of memory and 256GB of storage for a yet-to-be-announced price. Both come with microSD slots so you can easily expand the storage with an inexpensive microSD card.

You can preorder the Beam Pro at Xreal’s website today with Amazon availability in July. The first orders are expected to ship in August. If you already own an Xreal Beam, you qualify for a $50 discount if you preorder by July 10.

While the Xreal Beam Pro sounds really interesting, we haven’t had a chance to test it yet. We’ll share more details and our hands-on experience when review samples are available.

Alan Truly
Alan is a Computing Writer living in Nova Scotia, Canada. A tech-enthusiast since his youth, Alan stays current on what is…
Meta’s AI smart glasses collection can live stream video — but they’re missing a big feature
Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses in Headline style are worn by a model.

Ray-Ban Meta smart glasses shown in hand at the Meta event. Fionna Agomuoh / Digital Trends

Meta just announced its second-generation smart glasses, once again partnering with Ray-Ban to add more style to this collection of tech-enhanced glasses and shades. The headline feature is the ability to livestream video directly to Instagram and Facebook, but unlike some more premium options, the frames don't include displays for a mixed reality experience.

Read more
Are AR glasses still a pipe dream? I tested 3 of the newest to find out
Inmo Air 2, Xreal Air, and Engo 2 smart glasses are held in hands.

The augmented reality future we've all been dreaming of is still years away. I'm not here to debate that. But the hardware and software that currently exists has continued to improve. Early adopters are already enjoying lightweight glasses with sharp, bright displays, and some recent products demonstrate the progress made on that long path to AR glory.

I wanted to take stock of the current generation of smart glasses technology, complete with three different approaches. One is a stylish, fitness-focused pair of glasses that provides health-tracking data and directions at a glance. Another is all about entertainment and productivity, made possible with three large virtual screens around me. And then finally, the one that puts them all together in the most advanced smart glasses currently available, with a dedicated processor for AI chat, AR apps, and gesture controls. None provide the full picture of AR technology, but each offer a glimpse at the future of smart glasses -- and it's pretty exciting.
Engo 2 fitness glasses
Engo 2 glasses are very light, comfortable, and sporty. Photo by Tracey Truly / -

Read more
These AR glasses showed me the future of spatial computing — and I’m excited
Xreal Air is lightweight and comfortable enough for hours of use.

AR glasses are still a pipe dream. Early "smart" glasses like Amazon's Echo Frames, the Ray-Ban Facebook Stories glasses, and Snap Spectacles hardly whet my appetite to experience the future of AR.

The most interesting models, like the Xreal Air, Lenovo Glasses T1, and TCL NxtWear Air, simulate a big-screen TV to show a feed from a cable connected to a laptop or smartphone. There are even experiments like the Viture One XR that tried to sell the concept for cloud gaming.

Read more