What matters most is the handful of features you touch every session, not the longest spec list. AR display glasses shine as a portable, cable-light second screen, not as a desktop monitor stand-in. For a clean cable-managed desk, fewer cables and a single dock or hub do more than any amount of velcro tidying.

Quick Answer

AR glasses are best as a portable virtual monitor for travel and tidy desks, not a gaming-monitor replacement. A pair of display glasses (around 1080p per eye, 120Hz, ~80g) runs roughly R6,000-R12,000 at Evetech and pairs to a handheld, phone or laptop over USB-C DisplayPort.

What AR glasses are good for

Display glasses give a large floating screen, typically a 1080p-per-eye Micro-OLED panel at up to 120Hz, weighing 75-85g. That suits a clean desk (no monitor stand) and travel, turning a handheld or phone into a big private screen. They are not a true AR overlay or an esports display.

Connectivity and what drives them

Most glasses use one USB-C cable carrying DisplayPort video; confirm your device supports USB-C video out, or use a small dongle. For gaming, pair them with a Steam Deck OLED or ROG Ally X. Entry glasses near R6,000 give a sharp 1080p image; premium models at R10,000-R12,000 add brightness (nits) and field of view.

What matters most

What matters most in AR glasses is the handful of features you touch every session, not the longest spec list. Rank your needs first, then match the model to them. Paying for capabilities you will not use is the most common way buyers overspend.

Keeping cables clean

A clean cable-managed desk starts with fewer cables, not more velcro. A single dock or hub collapses several leads into one run, and routing power and data behind the desk does the rest. Pick gear that supports a single-cable connection so the desk stays tidy by design.

FAQ

How does this help a clean cable-managed desk?

It cuts the number of cables on the desk. A single connection for AR glasses and routing leads behind the desk keeps the surface tidy by design rather than by velcro.

Can AR glasses replace a gaming monitor?

For travel and tidy desks, yes as a 1080p 120Hz virtual screen; for competitive gaming, no. A 165Hz desktop monitor still wins on refresh rate and latency.

What do I need to connect AR glasses?

A device with USB-C DisplayPort video out: most modern laptops, many phones, and handhelds like the Steam Deck OLED. Some need a small adapter, so confirm USB-C video support first.

TIP

phone, laptop or handheld supports USB-C DisplayPort video before buying, and treat AR glasses as a portable second screen.