RayNeo’s Air 4 Pro AR Glasses Get Gotham Treatment

At RayNeo’s booth at Mobile World Congress 2026, the company took its already noteworthy Air 4 Pro AR glasses and gave them a distinctly Gotham twist. The standard model now has two limited-edition variants built around DC Comics’ caped crusader and his chaotic foil: the Batman Limited Justice Edition and the Joker Chaos Edition.

These aren’t just glasses with a logo slapped on. Both limited editions come with bespoke light-shield accessories that attach to the frame. In the Batman version, the shade borrows visual cues from the Dark Knight’s cowl to block ambient light and enhance immersion; the Joker variant instead leans into the clown prince’s signature look. Each set ships in custom DC-themed packaging, making them as much collector’s items as wearable tech.

Under the hood, the hardware is the same AR powerhouse introduced earlier in the year. The Air 4 Pro produces a virtual screen as large as 201 inches at a distance, driven by tandem Micro-OLED displays with up to 1200 nits brightness, HDR10 support, and up to 120 Hz refresh rates. That combination aims to deliver vibrant visuals whether you’re watching a movie, playing a console game mirrored through USB-C, or experiencing 3D media. A four-speaker setup tuned by Bang & Olufsen adds spatial audio without needing headphones.

The base Air 4 Pro glasses weigh just 76 grams, keeping things light on your face even with themed shades attached. The platform turns any USB-C-equipped source — from phones and laptops to handheld consoles — into a personal big screen, and can even convert 2D content into immersive 3D with a single toggle.

Pricing for the themed editions sits at $319, or a $20 premium over the standard $299 model. An Early Bird Bat deal currently has the glasses at $269.

For fans of DC Comics and early adopters of AR tech, these special editions offer a mix of collectible flair and high-end display performance. Whether the Batman and Joker motifs help normalize wearing AR glasses in public — or just make for a fun piece of geek wardrobe — they certainly give wearable displays a bit more personality at a show full of cutting-edge gadgets.

Written by
Old enough to have played retro games when they were still cutting edge, Mitch has been a gamer since the 70s. As his game-fu fades (did he ever really have any?), it is replaced with ever-stronger, and stranger, opinions. If that isn't the perfect recipe for a game reviewer, what is?

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