Meta has revealed Orion, a working prototype of true augmented reality glasses. The device looks like normal eyewear with transparent lenses, yet it places digital windows and 3D objects in your view. Meta presented Orion as a product prototype for internal testing and select demos, not a device you can buy today.
Orion uses tiny Micro LED projectors hidden in the frame to send light through special lenses made from silicon carbide, a hard and light material that bends light well. This design creates clear, see-through images without covering your face like a headset. Reviewers who tried Orion reported a wide field of view, around seventy degrees, which helps virtual content feel natural in the real world.
The glasses work with Meta AI, the company’s assistant, so they can understand the scene in front of you and overlay helpful information, like labels or a recipe. You can make video calls, read messages, and see apps floating in space, while still seeing people around you.
Control happens through simple inputs. You look at what you want to select, you can pinch with your fingers, you can use your voice, and you can wear a neural wristband. The wristband uses EMG, a method that reads tiny electrical signals from nerves in your wrist, to turn intent to move into commands. It does not read thoughts, it detects muscle signals.
The prototype is light for a device of this kind and includes several cameras for eye and hand tracking, plus a small wireless compute puck you carry so the glasses can run without a phone. Meta says Orion is extremely hard and costly to build today, so the company will keep testing and refining before any consumer launch.
Update August 2025: Meta keeps Orion in the lab, moves toward cheaper glasses with a small screen in 2025
Meta’s 2024 demo of Orion showed true augmented reality glasses, with see through lenses and holograms that sit in the real world. One year later, Orion remains a research prototype, not a product. Meta has focused on the hard parts of the stack, including custom chips, new optical parts in silicon carbide, and a separate “compute puck” that lets the frames stay light while running apps. The company is still testing internally and with select partners, and says a consumer version will come later.
What is new for late 2025 is a more modest device that bridges the gap. Multiple reports point to Meta preparing smart glasses with a small heads up display in one lens, a simpler design than full AR. These glasses are expected to show short messages, navigation prompts, and Meta AI answers, and to pair with a wristband that reads tiny muscle signals in the forearm for quiet, precise input. This wristband uses surface electromyography, a non invasive method that turns nerve signals into commands.
In short, Orion is still the vision for a future after the smartphone, but the near term plan is a lighter, cheaper step. If Meta succeeds, many people may first meet AI on their face through a tiny display, before full AR becomes small and affordable enough for daily use.
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