RayNeo Air 4 Pro and XREAL One are 120Hz display glasses, but they solve different problems. RayNeo offers HDR10, strong color, and lighter hardware for less. XREAL One costs more but adds built-in 3DoF, ultrawide viewing, electrochromic lenses, and direct screen controls.
Last updated: July 3, 2026
RayNeo
Affordable display glasses built for HDR10 entertainment, 120Hz gaming, vivid color, and lightweight USB-C viewing.
XREAL
Spatial display glasses built for anchored screens, ultrawide workspaces, electrochromic dimming, 120Hz gaming, and direct screen control.
Not enough votes yet
Be the first to cast your vote above!
↑ Cast your vote to help build the results
RayNeo Air 4 Pro is usually the better fit for buyers who mainly want display glasses for films, handheld gaming, travel, and everyday entertainment. It costs less, weighs less, supports HDR10, and carries stronger listed brightness, color, and contrast figures. At $299, it offers more display value per dollar. XREAL One is usually the better fit when the screen needs to behave like a spatial monitor rather than a simple mirrored display. Its built-in 3DoF, 50-degree field of view, electrochromic lenses, ultrawide mode, Side View, and onboard screen controls justify the extra cost for productivity and anchored viewing. Pick RayNeo for picture quality and value. Pick XREAL One when spatial control is the priority.
A: RayNeo Air 4 Pro is better for value, HDR10, lower weight, and straightforward films or gaming. XREAL One is better for built-in 3DoF, anchored screens, ultrawide workspaces, electrochromic dimming, and more advanced spatial-display controls.
A: RayNeo focuses on image quality and entertainment value. XREAL One includes an X1 spatial chip that provides built-in 3DoF, Anchor Mode, Follow Mode, Ultrawide Mode, Side View, and direct screen-position controls.
A: XREAL One has a 50-degree field of view, compared with 46 degrees for RayNeo Air 4 Pro. The difference is noticeable, particularly when using XREAL's larger anchored or ultrawide display modes.
A: RayNeo lists up to 1,200 nits, while XREAL lists 600 nits of perceived brightness. The figures may use different measurement methods, but RayNeo carries the higher official brightness specification.
A: Yes. RayNeo officially advertises native HDR10 for compatible content and source devices. It also uses the Vision 4000 chip to convert supported SDR video into an HDR-style presentation in real time.
A: XREAL does not prominently advertise native HDR10 support for XREAL One. Its main image features focus on 1080p resolution, 120Hz refresh, individualized color calibration, electrochromic dimming, and spatial-screen processing through the X1 chip.
A: Yes. XREAL One processes 3DoF directly through the glasses. You can anchor the screen in space or use ultrawide viewing without buying an XREAL Beam or Beam Pro specifically for screen stabilization.
A: No. RayNeo Air 4 Pro behaves primarily as a wearable external display. It can mirror supported devices and display 3D content, but it does not provide XREAL One-style native screen anchoring.
A: RayNeo is the stronger value option for 120Hz handheld and console gaming. XREAL One is better when you want a wider view, electrochromic dimming, anchored screens, or the ability to resize and reposition the virtual display.
A: XREAL One is substantially better for productivity. Its built-in 3DoF, curved ultrawide mode, screen anchoring, Side View, and direct display controls make it more suitable for documents, timelines, coding, and multi-window computer work.
A: Yes. XREAL advertises an ultrawide curved virtual display reaching up to 310 inches. It is designed for computer work and multitasking, although the practical experience depends on the connected device and operating system.
A: Yes, but not with the glasses alone. XREAL lists 6DoF support when the optional XREAL Eye accessory is attached. The Eye is sold separately and adds to the total purchase price.
A: RayNeo Air 4 Pro weighs 76g, while XREAL One weighs 82g. Six grams is not a dramatic difference, but RayNeo may feel less front-heavy during long films, flights, or extended handheld-gaming sessions.
A: It is worth the premium when you will use built-in 3DoF, ultrawide mode, electrochromic dimming, Side View, or adjustable screen placement. For movies and straightforward gaming, RayNeo offers stronger value.
Prices, features and specifications in this comparison were verified from official sources.
Last verified: July 2026
Share your experience with RayNeo Air 4 Pro or XREAL One
No opinions shared yet
Be the first to share your experience with RayNeo Air 4 Pro or XREAL One
More AR Glasses comparisons you might find useful