Smart glasses are a major trend this year at CES 2026, and though TCL has been in the space for a while, its RayNeo glasses haven’t made as many waves as competitors like Meta Ray-Ban and Xreal. That could be about to change. At CES, the brand announced the upcoming launch of the TCL RayNeo Air 4 Pro, which boasts an HDR-capable Micro-OLED display and a very competitive price tag.
The TCL RayNeo Air 4 Pro will officially launch on Jan. 25 for $299, significantly less than similar augmented reality smart glasses. Not only that, but TCL says the Air 4 Pro is the world’s first HDR10-enabled AR glasses.
The Air 4 Pro operates like other AR glasses, and they have to be tethered to a connected smartphone or laptop via USB-C. They project a virtual screen in the surrounding environment, letting you bring an extra screen with you wherever you go.
The TCL RayNeo Air 4 Pro will be released Jan. 25.
Credit: TCL
Credit: Timothy Werth / Mashable
I got the chance to demo the glasses ahead of their official launch, and the display was surprisingly crisp, bright, and colorful. I’ve been testing the Xreal One Pro AR glasses for a few months now, and the difference in the display quality was immediately noticeable. While the Xreal display can be a bit dim, the new RayNeo AR glasses were almost too bright.
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In addition to the impressive Micro-OLED display, the glasses feature Bang & Olufsen speakers and AI 3D video conversion, though I wasn’t able to test these capabilities during the demo.
The TCL RayNeo Air 4 Pro glasses have an impressive specs list as well:
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Display: SeeYa 0.6-inch Micro-OLED display
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Processor: Vision 4000 processor
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Brightness: Up to 1,200 nits
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Color accuracy: 98% DCI-P3
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Refresh rate: 60 to 120 Hz
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Weight: 76 grams
In addition to the RayNeo Air 4 Pro, TCL also showed off its RayNeo X3 Pro Project eSIM, a new concept pair of AR glasses with a built-in eSim. TCL says the RayNeo X3 Pro Project eSIM glasses are another world-first, and they have embedded eSIM (4G) connectivity that would let them operate untethered from a smartphone or laptop. Of course, those would likely be very expensive, as the just-launched standard RayNeo X3 Pro without an eSIM is priced at $1,299.
That said, untethered AR glasses have obvious benefits. They also look a lot cooler than some other alternatives, which I think is self-evident in my photos from the demo.
Credit: Timothy Werth / Mashable
Credit: Timothy Werth / Mashable
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