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You may have seen that Valve has tweaked the wording regarding its upcoming hardware launches, including the Steam Frame VR headset. “Early 2026” has now pivoted to a more vague “first half of the year” launch window, as revealed in a recent blog post on the Steam Community forums. At the same time, a few more questions about the hardware have been answered, and Valve plans to produce more video and blog content in the build-up to launch.

Valve says it plans to release prescription lens inserts for the Steam Frame. We’d also expect third parties to produce these lenses – for example, Apple chooses to bundle its Vision Pro headset with optical inserts from German manufacturer Zeiss. It’s not yet known whether Valve will produce official, first-party lenses or similarly outsource them.

Does the Steam Frame work with glasses?

Prescription lenses are designed to make using VR headsets easier or otherwise more comfortable for glasses wearers. However, they aren’t a necessity for the Steam Frame. According to Valve, members of its team who wear glasses have been using the headset “without issue,” though it ultimately comes down to the width of your glasses’ frames.

Can Steam Frame be used while wearing glasses?

A bunch of people on the team wear glasses and use Steam Frame without issue, but it really depends on the width of the glasses frames. And while we don’t have details to share yet, we are looking into making prescription lens inserts available ahead of launch.

Source: Valve, via Steam Community

The lead developer of Godot XR, Bastiaan Olij, recently talked about his experience with a Steam Frame dev kit, pointing towards the comfort factor as one of his favorite things about it so far (he particularly likes that it can rest on his forehead without discomfort). Olij, as a glasses wearer, also says “it’s fine” with his glasses on, though admits he’ll “eventually get lenses for it”.

The Steam Frame has been designed as a lightweight VR headset, weighing in at just 440 grams. This is around 75 grams lighter than the Meta Quest 3 and Meta Quest 3S, so it’s clear that Valve has taken steps to ensure the device is comfortable for a wide range of users.