It was promised as a new age for businesses. Virtual reality, augmented reality, mixed reality – in whatever shape it took, this was going to be the 21st century game-changer. No more staring at screens or using a mouse. That’s ancient, 20th century thinking, that is.

This new reality would see the advent of true hands-free computing and unparalleled remote experiences, wherever in the world professionals were based. From prototyping to healthcare diagnoses, it heralded a new age. And, like those stuck in Casablanca, we waited. And waited. And waited.

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When Facebook acquired Oculus in 2014, it seemed as if the social giant sought to conquer new worlds to keep growing, even if it had to invent them. A decade later, it’s proved to be Meta’s equivalent of Google’s Android purchase.

While the company never characterized the Quest as a video game console – and neither Meta nor the leading console makers referred to the other as major competition – Meta’s developer events would invariably highlight new games as the headset’s leading third-party content.

The Meta Quest Pro

Deadpool VR: Immersing in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (Image credit: Future)

HTC Vive was released in early 2023, and the lowest-cost option in the current line-up is about $1,000.

The Xreal One Pro smart glasses

(Image credit: Future / Hamish Hector)

his article said, “I think we’re just about done with our dalliances with too-expensive episodic-use immersion devices. The time for AI-powered AR glasses is now here.”

Of course, Google hasn’t hit a lot of home runs with Android in categories beyond smartphones, and PC vendors including Acer and HP were burned by Microsoft’s Windows Mixed Reality headset initiative.

But if brands like Dell, HP, Lenovo, Acer, and Asus can get the ball rolling with pro-grade business tools and enhanced AI, there’s potential to sustainably match or exceed what Meta spent big to create and is now moving quickly to abandon.

We’ve tested the best VR headsets and the best smart glasses.