Also, the Antigravity A1 supports BeiDou, Galileo and GPS satellite navigation systems. Meanwhile, the drone’s Vision Goggles feature dual 1-inch Micro OLED displays that output at 2,560 x 2,560 pixels per eye. Unfortunately, these must be tethered to an external battery like Apple’s Vision Pro rather than the built-in battery solution offered in DJI’s alternatives like the Goggles N3 (curr. $339 on Amazon).
The Antigravity A1 is available to order from today, starting at $1,599 in the US, CA$1,899 in Canada, €1,399 in the Eurozone, £1,219 in the UK and AU$2,199 in Australia. Those wanting additional flight batteries, propellers and a sling bag will need to step up to the Explorer Bundle though, which retails for $1,899, CA$2,199, €1,599, £1,399 and AU$2,799. Antigravity also offers the Infinity Bundle for $1,999, CA$2,299, €1,699, £1,499 and AU$2,899, which adds swaps in three High Capacity Flight batteries and a Quick Reader accessory for simplifying media transfers. Please see Antigravity’s website for more details.