Viture unveils Luma Series XR smartglasses

Viture is launching a new generation of its XR glasses: the Luma Series, a wearable that lets you view content on the equivalent of a 152-inch virtual display.

The Luma Series is a follow-up to the Viture Pro, which is still available for $470 and up. The Luma Pro has a premium translucent design with dynamic light effects, a front RGB camera for spatial capture, and new optical enhancements that push clarity and comfort even further.

The features include seamless plug-and-play with Switch 2 (via Pro Mobile Dock), Steam Deck, PC, and any USB-C device. It has 4K-like clarity in a lightweight, translucent frame, electrochromic film for instant tint control and dynamic light effects for extra flair.

It also comes with next-gen Harman audio, customizable magnetic fit, and -4D myopia adjustment. The glasses are design for flexibility with all-day comfort in mind for just about everybody. It also has front RGB camera support that enables basic spatial capture and 6DoF tracking in Viture’s SpaceWalker app (coming post-launch).

The flagship model includes The Beast, which features Sony’s latest micro-OLED panel and a 58-degree field of view. The screen has what the company calls a “4K-like” ultra-sharp display that is 50% sharper than Viture Pro.

The company said that, in virtual displays, resolution numbers alone don’t tell the whole story. Even at the same 1080p, screen quality can vary drastically. Many focus solely on resolution, but sharpness is about more than that.

Key upgrades

Luma’s translucent look. Source: Viture

Display Improvements include a larger screen size, up from the virtual equivalent of 55 inches with the Viture Pro to 68 inches using Sony’s micro-OLED panel, for expanding FOV and reducing fatigue. Luma Ultra and the Beast go even further with Sony’s latest panel.

It also has reduced crosstalk. Each light-emitting unit is more vibrant. Combined with improved screen processing, especially reduced crosstalk, this delivers higher contrast and a sharper, more vivid screen.

And thanks to in-house optical innovations, the device has 1,000 to 1,250 nits peak brightness. Brighter screens make images appear sharper and more detailed, especially because the human eye perceives colors better in high-brightness settings.

There’s also an advanced optical system, with a 30% boost in resolving power, up to 50% improvement in high-frequency detail, ensuring minimal image quality loss from screen to eye. It has edge-to-edge clarity: Inspired by telescope optics, the screen remains sharp across the whole view, not just in the center.

It has reduced distortion, with no “astigmatism”, ghosting, or color fringing — even at the edges. And it has stray light control. Camera-grade anti-reflective coatings and super-black materials keep images pure and distraction-free.

All four new models maintain the same level of sharpness and clarity. However, Luma Ultra and Beast feature Sony’s latest micro-OLED panels — an industry first. These advanced panels reduce power consumption by 35%, allowing us to confidently push peak brightness even higher, up to 1,250 nits, while effectively managing heat to maintain a comfortable viewing experience.

Additionally, lower power consumption means less strain on connected devices like the Pro Neckband or your smartphone, helping extend their battery life during use.

Coming in the future are screens with 1440p panels, with production targeted for 2026. Those screens are not merely about releasing higher resolution. They’re about delivering a truly optimized, uncompromising visual experience. When we launch it, you can trust that it will offer the sharpest, most refined screen ever, enhanced by all of Viture’s proprietary optical innovations.

Viture’s fashionable look. Source: Viture

As for true 4K, it is firmly on the company’s roadmap. In the future, 70-degree field of view is coming as early as next year.

Which model should you choose? Ultimately, the choice comes down to your personal preferences and priorities — and that is why the firm designed different options.

If you value a larger screen and built-in spatial freedom through 3DoF, Beast might be the ideal fit. If adjustable vision correction and fine-tuned fit are more important, Luma may be the better choice.

While 3DoF is not hardware-integrated in Luma, the SpaceWalker platform provides a robust spatial experience with advanced software-based tracking. Viture has also integrated a magnetometer to minimize drift and continuously refine algorithms to further enhance stability and responsiveness. Many Windows users have already noticed these improvements, and they will continue to get even better over time.

Because the Switch 2 console is larger, a new dedicated mount has been developed to ensure proper fit and stability.

Dean Takahashi

Dean Takahashi is editorial director for GamesBeat. He has been a tech journalist since 1988, and he has covered games as a beat since 1996. He was lead writer for GamesBeat at VentureBeat from 2008 to April 2025. Prior to that, he wrote for the San Jose Mercury News, the Red Herring, the Wall Street Journal, the Los Angeles Times, and the Dallas Times-Herald. He is the author of two books, "Opening the Xbox" and "The Xbox 360 Uncloaked." He organizes the annual GamesBeat Next, GamesBeat Summit and GamesBeat Insider Series: Hollywood and Games conferences and is a frequent speaker at gaming and tech events. He lives in the San Francisco Bay Area.