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Home Gaming

Asus ROG and Xreal just built the AR glasses gamers have been waiting for, at a price that stings

May 17, 2026
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AR Glasses have promised a lot over the years but delivered considerably less. Asus ROG and Xreal are making a serious case that time is different. The companies have announced the ROG Xreal R1, the world’s first 240Hz micro-OLED gaming AR glasses.

Pre-orders for the device are live on Best Buy for $849. Worldwide shipping begins on June 1, 2026.

Co-engineered by ROG and XREAL, R1 brings the world’s first 240Hz gaming AR to a massive 171-inch virtual screen, built for handheld, PC, and console gaming.

Pre-orders open:
🇺🇸North America & 🇪🇺 Europe: May 17

Your battlefield is no longer tied to a desk.

🔔Be the first to… pic.twitter.com/qKWlCNmcfF

— XREAL 👓 (@XREAL_Global) May 15, 2026

What makes the ROG Xreal R1 different from other AR glasses?

The headline spec here is the 240Hz refresh rate, which is double what any competing AR glasses currently offer.

The R1 uses dual 0.55-inch Sony micro-OLED displays with a peak brightness of 700 nits, a 0.01ms response time, and a 57-degree field of view, which the company claims covers 95% of your focused vision.

The result is a virtual screen that appears 171 inches wide, which provides cinematic gaming real estate, making even 100-inch TVs feel quaint. The whole thing weighs just 91 grams, connects via USB-C or ROG Hub, and features Bose audio built in.

Inside, Xreal’s X1 spatial coprocessor handles the menu system, 3DoF tracking, and latency management. The motion-to-photon lag is kept at 3ms. You can use the glasses with PCs, consoles, and smartphones.

Is $849 actually worth it for a pair of AR gaming glasses?

However, when paired with the ROG Ally handheld, the glasses handle the gameplay display, while the handheld becomes a live control panel while the glasses.

Given that the Meta Quest 3 VR headset costs hundreds less than the R1, the new gaming headset is making a weak case, despite featuring all the bells and whistles in its spec sheet.

If real-world performance matches the spec sheet, that bet could pay off handsomely. If it doesn’t, $849 is a painful lesson.

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