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Wigain Omnision XR Glasses Review: The First True Spatial Computer You Can Wear

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Most AR glasses feel like cool tech demos with great intentions but limited use. But Wigain Omnision XR Glasses don’t feel limited—they feel inevitable. Imagine sunglasses that run on dual Snapdragon chips, project a bright full-color waveguide display, and respond to your eyes, hands, voice—or even a ring on your finger. Now imagine they do this without looking like sci-fi cosplay. That’s Omnision: not the future, but the future finally catching up with wearability.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses review

Specifications

Processor (Glasses): Snapdragon XR2 Gen 1, 8-core @ 2.4 GHz, 42 TOPS AI performance

• Processor (Station): Snapdragon XR2 Gen 2

Operating System: Wigain Oasis OS

Memory & Storage:

Glasses: 8 GB RAM + 128 GB ROM

Station: 12 GB RAM + 512 GB ROM

Display: 800p native resolution, Full-Color Silicon Carbide Waveguide

Brightness: Up to 900 nits

Refresh Rate: 60 Hz

Field of View: 50°

Camera: 12 MP RGB

Tracking: 6DoF head tracking, eye tracking, gesture recognition

Interaction: Buttons, gestures, voice control, Smart Ring, Smart Wristband

Connectivity: Wi‑Fi 7, Bluetooth 5.3, USB-C

Battery Life: 4–6 hours (with Station)

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Vision Realized

Let’s start with the optics. The Full-Color Silicon Carbide Waveguide delivers up to 900 nits of brightness, meaning it holds up outdoors—something most AR glasses fail at. The 800p resolution may seem modest, but it’s crisp in real-world use thanks to smart UI rendering and vivid color reproduction. With a 50° field of view, it’s immersive enough for XR tasks but never overwhelming.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Real Compute, Really Wearable

Unlike most smart glasses that lean on your phone or limit you to voice control, Omnision is powered by an 8-core Snapdragon XR2 Gen 1 chip built directly into the glasses. It runs at 2.4 GHz and pushes 42 TOPS of AI compute—that’s serious horsepower in a slim wearable.

Need more? Pair with the Station: a pocket-sized module running XR2 Gen 2, bumping RAM to 12 GB and storage to 512 GB. It also extends battery life to 4–6 hours, while enabling more demanding XR experiences like multi-app rendering and real-time spatial processing.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Natural Interactions, Reimagined

Forget buttons and touchpads. Omnision supports eye tracking, 6DoF head movement, hand gestures, and voice input. But that’s not all—you can connect the Smart Ring or Smart Wristband to unlock even more precise spatial controls. This isn’t about novelty. It’s about letting you interact with digital content the way you do with physical objects: naturally.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Design & Comfort: Where Tech Hides in Style

Despite everything packed inside, the glasses remain slim, balanced, and discreet. Three frame finishes are available, and none scream “prototype.” You’ll find well-placed tactile buttons, subtle indicators, and a clean silhouette. I wore them for hours without pressure points or overheating. It’s wearable tech that finally gets the “wearable” part right.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Real-World Use

Whether projecting a virtual dashboard during travel, viewing design mockups in 3D space, or watching a video while multitasking in AR, everything feels responsive and sharp. With Wi‑Fi 7, latency stays below 20 ms. Apps launch quickly, tracking feels native, and visuals remain smooth even with head movement. The Station handles heavier workloads without heating the glasses—smart separation of power and portability.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

How It Stacks Up

Wigain Omnision XR vs INMO Air 3

• Compute Power:

Wigain: XR2 Gen 1 (42 TOPS) + XR2 Gen 2 (Station)

INMO: entry-level SoC

 → Wigain wins decisively

• Display & FOV:

Wigain: 800p, 900 nits, 50° waveguide

INMO: lower-res waveguide, dimmer, narrower FOV

 → Omnision offers richer and brighter visuals

• Input Methods:

Wigain: eyes, hands, voice, Smart Ring, Wristband

INMO: touchpad and voice only

 → Wigain is vastly more immersive and flexible

• Use Cases:

Wigain: spatial computing, XR development, immersive media

INMO: smart assistant overlays, casual navigation and calls

Verdict:

INMO Air 3 is a good entry-level smart assistant.

Wigain Omnision is a mobile spatial workstation.

INMO Air 3 smart glasses
INMO Air 3

What Others Say

“This is the most capable XR glasses platform we’ve seen this year.” — Wigain Official

“These glasses make Meta’s Ray-Ban feel like a toy.” — Reddit XR forum user

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Cons

800p resolution may disappoint spec chasers

• Smart Ring/Wristband sold separately

• Oasis OS is new and has a limited app catalog

Not designed for full passthrough mixed reality

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

FAQ

• Do the glasses work standalone?

Yes — with XR2 Gen 1, 8 GB RAM, and 128 GB storage.

• What’s the battery life?

4–6 hours when paired with the Station.

• Can I develop custom apps?

An SDK is in development for Wigain Oasis OS.

• Are Smart Ring and Wristband included?

No — they’re optional accessories with full native support.

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Price & Availability

$99 preorder deposit

• Retail price: TBD

• Shipping: September 2025

Warranty: 12 months

• Buy from: wigain.com

Wigain Omnision XR Glasses

Final Verdict

The Wigain Omnision XR Glasses are the first spatial computing glasses that feel purpose-built, not experimental. With modular power, sharp optics, natural input, and elegant design—they raise the bar not just for smart glasses, but for wearables as a whole.

I give it 4.6 out of 5

• Compute Power: 5

• Design: 4.5

• Ecosystem: 4

• Value: 5

These aren’t for everyone. But if you’re building in XR, creating content in AR, or just tired of half-measures in wearable tech—Wigain finally delivers.