RayNeo Air 4 Pro Undercuts Rivals at $299, but Pixel Compatibility and Fit Weaken Appeal
Updated
Updated · Android Authority · May 14
RayNeo Air 4 Pro Undercuts Rivals at $299, but Pixel Compatibility and Fit Weaken Appeal
3 articles · Updated · Android Authority · May 14
$299 RayNeo Air 4 Pro glasses are framed as a strong budget pick for private, portable viewing, delivering 1080p micro-OLED displays, 120Hz support and easy USB-C plug-and-play use across phones, laptops and handhelds.
Android Authority says the value case rests on price: the Air 4 Pro costs about $100 less than VITURE's $399 Luma XR Glasses and roughly $150 less than XREAL's $448.99 1S.
Pixel 9 Pro testing exposed notable gaps, with HDR10 and 3D features failing to work properly and the glasses draining about 20% of the phone's battery in under an hour.
Fit emerged as the biggest drawback because the projected image cannot be repositioned, leaving at least one edge blurry for the reviewer and making work tasks less comfortable.
RayNeo pitches a 201-inch virtual screen, but the review says the experience is closer to a travel-friendly wearable monitor than a full smart-glasses or home-theater replacement.
With its hidden adapter costs and visual flaws, is the RayNeo Air 4 Pro a budget bargain or a user-unfriendly trap?
As rivals launch superior AR glasses, is this $299 portable display already obsolete upon arrival?