ASUS has been a quiet observer of the smart glasses space, but the AirVision M1 marks their formal entry. Positioned as a productivity accessory rather than an AR gaming device, the M1 aims to replace your multi-monitor setup with a pair of lightweight glasses. It’s an ambitious pitch — does it deliver? After spending time with the AirVision M1, the answer is more nuanced than a simple yes or no.
What the AirVision M1 Actually Is
The AirVision M1 is not a pair of AI glasses, and it’s not an AR headset. It’s a wearable external display — essentially a high-resolution microOLED screen built into a glasses frame. When connected to your laptop, phone, or gaming handheld via USB-C, the M1 projects a virtual 1080p display that appears to float in front of your eyes. The promise is simple: take your workspace anywhere, with as many virtual monitors as you need.
Under the hood, each lens houses a Sony microOLED panel. The display supports 1920×1080 resolution per eye with a 60Hz refresh rate. ASUS rates the brightness at up to 1,000 nits, which is sufficient for indoor use but still struggles in direct sunlight. The 45-degree field of view means the virtual screen is roughly equivalent to a 130-inch display viewed from about a meter away — large enough to be immersive without overwhelming your peripheral vision.
Build Quality and Comfort
ASUS has clearly iterated on the lessons learned by earlier entrants. The AirVision M1 weighs 85 grams — lighter than many competitors in this category. The frame uses a magnesium alloy construction that feels premium without being brittle. The nose pads and temple tips are adjustable, and ASUS includes three different nose bridge sizes in the box to accommodate different face shapes.
One thoughtful design choice: the M1 includes diopter adjustment wheels on each arm, allowing users to compensate for nearsightedness from -1 to -6 diopters without needing prescription inserts. This alone makes the M1 significantly more accessible than competitors that require separate prescription lens purchases.
The Display in Practice
The visual quality is genuinely impressive. Colors are vibrant thanks to the microOLED panels, and the contrast ratio is effectively infinite since each pixel produces its own light. Text is sharp enough for coding, document editing, and spreadsheet work — the primary use cases ASUS is targeting.
ASUS includes their GlideWear software that allows you to pin multiple virtual monitors in 3D space. You can have a code editor in your central view, a terminal window off to the right, and a reference browser window to the left — or any arrangement that suits your workflow. The head-tracking is responsive and the virtual monitors stay firmly in place as you look around.
Where It Falls Short
For all its strengths, the AirVision M1 has limitations worth noting. The 45-degree field of view is narrower than what you’d get from a desktop monitor setup. You’re effectively looking at a large floating screen, not a full augmented reality overlay. This works well for focused productivity but feels constrained for immersive media consumption.
The glasses require a wired USB-C connection to function, which tethers you to your device. While this ensures zero latency and unlimited power, it limits mobility. Battery life is a non-issue since the glasses draw power from the connected device, but the cable can be annoying when you want to move around.
There’s also the social factor. At 85 grams with visible electronics on the arms, the M1 doesn’t pass as normal glasses. You’ll get looks at a coffee shop, and they’re best reserved for dedicated work sessions rather than all-day wear.
Competitive Landscape
The AirVision M1 competes in the wearable monitor space alongside products like the Xreal Air 2, Viture Pro, and TCL RayNeo Air 2. Where the M1 differentiates is in build quality — the magnesium frame and diopter adjustment are genuinely premium touches that few competitors offer. The GlideWear multi-monitor software is also a step ahead of what most rivals provide out of the box.
The Verdict
Does the ASUS AirVision M1 deliver? For its target audience — remote workers, digital nomads, developers, and anyone who wants a portable multi-monitor setup — yes, absolutely. The display quality is excellent, the build is premium, and the diopter adjustment makes it accessible to more users than any competitor.
But it’s not for everyone. If you want AI features, spatial computing, or all-day wearable smarts, look elsewhere. The AirVision M1 is a specialized tool that does one thing very well: giving you a private, portable workspace anywhere you go. For people who need that, it’s hard to beat.


