TCL, maker of some of the best TVs under its brand RayNeo, on Wednesday released its latest pair of XR glasses, the RayNeo Air 2. Available from Amazon for $349, these glasses aren't designed to be VR headsets; rather, they are here to bring a big screen to your everyday life. I've spent some time with them for another article, so I thought I would give you a brief hands-on.
Not a Meta Quest
There are many headsets and glasses out there, and they can be confusing. Terms like VR, AR and XR can often be used indiscriminately, blurring the lines of what each can actually do. To clarify, XR in terms of the RayNeo Air 2 means it can "eXtend Reality" (that's where the XR comes from) to make something you're already doing easier. Think of it like a giant 201-inch projector screen that sits on your face.
Unlike the Meta Quest 3, the RayNeo can't operate on its own. The glasses require a USB-C connection to whatever device you want to show on the bigger screen. So if you plug the USB-C into your MacBook, you'll get a large display of your desktop on the Sony-built micro-OLED displays. So far, once I adjusted the frames and nose guards, the image has been crisp and clear on all of the devices I've tried, though the experience for each is different.
While RayNeo says it has support for a wide range of Android phones, iPhones, Macs, PCs and game consoles, the reality is a little different. Only Android phones with DisplayPort technology turned on are compatible without a separate Miracast adapter, and only the iPhone 15 works for the same reason. For some inexplicable reason, many phone manufacturers, Google included, don't have one of the coolest features of USB-C turned on by default. If you have a Samsung, you are likely to be in luck, but only the Pixel 8 from Google has DisplayPort turned on.
You will also need an adapter for the Nintendo Switch, to use that device, and while RayNeo says it's compatible with other consoles, I can't see an easy way to do that without specialized equipment. Even a USB-C-to-HDMI cable doesn't seem to work.
Clear as the noonday sun
The RayNeo Air 2's sit a little way from your face, so wearing them in daylight isn't a great experience.
That all being said, when it does work, it works very well. I wish I could adjust the screen size to better fit the viewing space. The 201-inch screen fills all of the space to the point of cutting the edges off, so it would be nice to be able to reduce that to say, 180 inches, so that I can see the whole screen comfortably without it blurring the edges of games. The bone-conducted speakers in the glasses' arms work very well and give very little bleeding outside of your personal zone. This is especially important if you are using them on a plane, one of the best use cases for them.
The 120Hz display is crisp and bright under every lighting type except direct sunlight. Because the Air 2 are designed to be lightweight and unobtrusive, they don't have blinkers on the side to block out light bleed. Most of the time, this isn't an issue, but lying down on a blanket in the shining sun made it almost impossible to see the Netflix show I was trying to watch, though I could hear it fine. That really is the only edge case, though. In any lighting indoors, the Air 2 is great.
A great accessory for a great accessory
If, like me, you get fed up with the terrible choices on the hotel TV, and you want something you can travel with that has all your settings already, try the Pocket TV from RayNeo. Originally designed to work with the RayNeo Smart glasses, the output is just USB-C meaning it will work with any USB-C monitor or, if you have a USB-C-to-HDMI cable, any standard TV.
The Pocket TV is Google TV-powered, so it's easy to navigate and comes with 64GB of memory and room for an SD card, so you can save your shows for offline air travel. I've used it a lot with the RayNeo glasses, and it's a fantastic little ecosystem for watching your favorite shows privately while traveling. It even has Chromecast built-in if you want to send stuff from your phone.
I also tried it with the Geforce Now app available on Google TV with the Pocket TV, and it works perfectly, especially when connected to the RayNeo Air 2s. Playing your PC games while lying on a hotel bed with only a pair of glasses and a small pocket TV is an excellent experience.
I've enjoyed using the RayNeo XR glasses, and although they don't work with every device I hoped they would, I can use them to play games on my Mac and use them on an old PC to stream Xbox Game Pass games while lying in bed. I also found them to be an excellent companion for working on my laptop while traveling. There are still some problems that I would like to see addressed, and more transparency about what phones are compatible with the Air 2 glasses without requiring an adapter would go a long way to making them my go-to XR glasses.
The Rayneo Air 2 XR glasses are available from Amazon for $379, and, coupled with the Pocket TV for $179, make for a fantastic way to travel.