Quick Answer

For competitive gamers, the AR-glasses upgrade path is: spend less on a basic mirror-display pair if you only want a private big-screen, and notice more from a higher-refresh, low-latency pair if you actually game competitively through them. Entry pairs run R6,000 to R8,000; faster panels around 90Hz to 120Hz sit at R9,000 to R12,000 at Evetech. Refresh and latency are what competitive play needs.

Why Refresh And Latency Matter Here

For competitive gaming, the spec that counts is panel refresh and added latency. A basic 60Hz AR display is fine for watching or casual play, but competitive shooters and fighting games want a 90Hz or 120Hz panel and minimal processing lag so the image keeps up with fast input. Spending less on a slow pair you will outgrow is a false economy for a competitive player.

That said, the glasses still only show what your source device renders - they add no fps. The source PC or handheld must already produce high frame rates for a high-refresh panel to help.

Spend Less Versus Notice More

Spend less if you mainly want a private screen for non-competitive sessions - an entry 60Hz pair around R6,000 does that. Notice more by stepping up to a 90Hz-plus, low-latency pair if you genuinely play ranked through them, where the smoother image and lower lag are felt.

Confirm your device outputs a high frame rate and that the glasses' panel and connection support the refresh you are paying for, or the upgrade is wasted.

Spend Bands

An entry 60Hz pair runs R6,000 to R8,000 - fine for casual use. A higher-refresh 90Hz to 120Hz low-latency pair for competitive play sits at R9,000 to R12,000.

FAQ

What AR-glasses spec matters for competitive gaming?

Panel refresh and latency. A 90Hz or 120Hz low-latency panel keeps up with fast competitive input; a 60Hz pair suits casual or non-competitive use. Refresh is the key upgrade.

Do AR glasses add fps to my game?

No. They are a display only. Your PC or handheld renders the frames; the glasses show them. A high-refresh panel only helps if the source already produces high frame rates.

Should a competitive gamer buy the cheap pair?

Only for casual sessions. For genuine ranked play, the entry 60Hz pair feels limiting - step up to a 90Hz-plus low-latency model so the image and lag match competitive input.

For competitive play, choose a 90Hz-plus low-latency pair and confirm your PC or handheld pushes matching frame rates - otherwise a faster panel is wasted.