For the past year or two, the smart-glasses conversation has been dominated by a handful of players: Meta’s Ray-Ban collab, Google’s experiments, Samsung’s whispers, and enough Apple rumor mill smoke to fog a small café. Into that crowded ring steps HTC — a company most of us associate with early Android phones and high-end VR headsets — with something more understated than a headset and more practical than a prototype: the VIVE Eagle, a pair of AI-powered sunglasses that look, at first blush, like the kind of product the world might actually wear every day.
On paper, the Eagle doesn’t try to blow your mind. It’s not an AR display layered over your field of view; it’s sunglasses with on-board smarts. That might be exactly the point. HTC has built the thing in the image of the recent winners in this category: slim frames, open-ear audio for situational awareness, a camera for “look and ask” style interactions, and — now — a voice assistant that taps modern large language models. The glasses ship with a 12-megapixel ultra-wide camera, lightweight frames that tip the scales at around 49 grams, and ZEISS sun lenses. They’re eye-wear first, gadget second.
What makes the Eagle feel like a next-gen product is how HTC wires the hardware into the AI experience. The company’s VIVE AI assistant can be triggered by a “Hey VIVE” wake phrase and, crucially, the assistant can route queries through third-party models — including OpenAI’s ChatGPT and Google’s Gemini — depending on what you need. That means the glasses can do the usual hands-free stuff (take a photo, record a quick note, add a reminder), but also more model-heavy tasks: ask follow-ups about what you just photographed, get context on a menu item, or request a translation. HTC emphasizes local processing and privacy controls, but the option to funnel requests to other models is its clearest differentiator so far.
Translation is pitched as one of the Eagle’s killer features. Using the camera and the assistant together, HTC says the glasses can translate text and signs from more than a dozen languages in real time — useful for travel and quick street-side reading without pulling out your phone. It’s the kind of multimodal use case companies keep promising for years; with more compact cameras and better on-device AI, it’s finally leaping out of the lab and into sunglasses frames. HTC lists support for “over 13” languages in official materials.
There are a few practical numbers worth flagging: the VIVE Eagle is priced at NT$15,600 (roughly $520 USD), and for now, HTC is selling it only in Taiwan — preorders and telco bundles are part of the initial rollout. Battery life and audio are also in the conversation: HTC quotes long standby and several hours of continuous music playback, and many early writeups point out the Eagle’s larger battery cell versus its direct rivals. If you’re wondering about fit, the frames come in four colors (Berry, Coffee, Grey, and Black), and the package includes ZEISS sun lenses and a carrying case.

So how does HTC’s entry stack up against Meta and the others? In some respects, the choices are conservative: no full AR overlay, no holographic HUD, and no radical redesign of eyewear norms. In others, HTC is taking swings Meta hasn’t: allowing the user to pick which AI model powers the assistant (which could matter if you prefer Gemini’s multimodal chops or ChatGPT’s conversational strengths), and leaning into privacy messaging about local storage and encryption. Early comparisons also point to a slightly bigger battery and familiar — but high-quality — optics from ZEISS, which could make the Eagle feel like a more refined daily driver than some competitors.
Still, the obvious question is distribution and ecosystem. Building a pair of smart sunglasses is one thing; convincing a global market to wear them every day is another. HTC’s VIVE brand is respected among VR heads and pro users, but it doesn’t have the fashion cachet of Ray-Ban or the retail muscle of Apple. And the software side — app support, accessory ecosystem, regional model licensing, and carrier deals — will decide whether the Eagle is a niche curiosity or a mainstream hit. Launching in Taiwan makes sense as a controlled market test, but it’s also a reminder that availability, support, and aftercare vary dramatically by region.
For consumers weighing options, a few takeaways: if you want the most “glasses-like” experience with a reliable camera and open-ear audio, the Eagle looks promising; if you care deeply about which AI model answers your questions, HTC’s flexibility is appealing; and if you live outside Taiwan, be prepared to wait (or import) until HTC announces a wider release. For the industry at large, the VIVE Eagle is further proof we’ve entered a phase of iterative, practical hardware — where companies are building small, useful experiences rather than chasing immersive sci-fi visions. That matters. Practical wins are the quickest path to mass adoption.
HTC’s move also tightens an interesting arms race: Meta’s done the visibility work, Google and Samsung have the ecosystem heft, and Apple still holds the potential to mainstream a category if — and when — it decides to. HTC doesn’t have to beat them at scale to make an impact; it only needs to deliver a well-made, tasteful product that people actually want to wear. For now, the VIVE Eagle is exactly that sort of challenger — unflashy, thoughtfully specced, and, importantly, real. The rest will come down to whether it lands in stores outside Taiwan and whether the software lives up to the pitch.
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