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Acer announces AR Vision GR0 and GI0 AI Glasses for 2026

Acer isn't a name you'd normally associate with wearables - but its two new glasses are proof the company is paying close attention to where tech is heading.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
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ByShubham Sawarkar
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I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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May 30, 2026, 9:00 AM EDT
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Acer AR Vision GR0 glasses (GR100F)
Image: Acer
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Smart glasses are having a moment. Meta’s Ray-Ban collaboration has reportedly sold over 7 million units, Google just used its biggest annual stage – I/O 2026 – to announce Gemini-powered eyewear built with Samsung, and the global AR glasses market is on track to hit 950,000 shipments this year alone, a 53% jump year over year. The category is no longer a curiosity. It’s becoming a real product space – and now Acer wants a seat at the table.

At a press event in Taipei on May 29, 2026, Acer unveiled two new wearable products: the AR Vision GR0 and the GI0 AI glasses. They’re very different devices solving very different problems, which is kind of the point. One is a full-blown augmented reality headset built for immersive viewing. The other is a lightweight, Gemini-powered AI companion designed to quietly sit on your face and make your day easier. Together, they represent Acer’s most serious move into wearables yet.

The AR Vision GR0: a giant screen you wear

Let’s start with the flashier one. The Acer AR Vision GR0 is, at its core, a display device – except that display wraps around your entire field of vision. The glasses house two micro OLED screens, each rendering at 1920×1080 resolution, and together they’re designed to simulate the experience of sitting in front of a 172-inch screen from about 6 meters away. If you’ve ever squinted at a laptop on a long flight, wishing the screen were just a little bigger, the pitch here is pretty obvious.

Acer AR Vision GR0 glasses (GR100F)
Image: Acer

The GR0 doesn’t run on its own processing power, though. It needs to be plugged into something – a phone, laptop, or tablet – via a wired connection, and it works with Android, iOS, and Windows. That’s actually a deliberate design choice, not a shortcut. By offloading all the compute to whatever device you’re already carrying, Acer keeps the glasses themselves incredibly light: the whole unit weighs just 69 grams. That’s about the weight of a large egg. For a device that’s supposed to sit on your face for hours, that matters more than people realize.

The display can handle both 2D and 3D content, and the specs underneath are genuinely impressive – a 50,000:1 contrast ratio, 95% DCI-P3 color gamut, and 24-bit color. There’s also a detachable light shield for blocking ambient light when you need full immersion, and a myopia lens option for people who wear prescription glasses, which is a thoughtful inclusion that the category often overlooks. Audio comes through speakers positioned near your ears for a natural, open-ear stereo effect rather than earbuds jammed in your canal.

The GR0 also packs in 3DoF sensor tracking (accelerometers, magnetometers, and proximity sensors), which opens the door for some rudimentary spatial interaction – enough for AR-enhanced productivity overlays and gaming, but not quite the full six-degrees-of-freedom experience you’d get from a dedicated headset like the Meta Quest.

Where it gets genuinely interesting is in the work-from-public use case. Acer pitches the GR0 as a privacy screen for when you’re working somewhere you’d rather not have strangers reading over your shoulder – think airports, coffee shops, or open-plan offices. Wrap those micro OLEDs across your field of view and suddenly your spreadsheet or presentation is effectively invisible to everyone else in the room. It’s a quieter sell than “immersive gaming,” but it might actually be the more compelling one for the target buyer.

Pricing lands at $499.99 in North America, with availability starting in Q3 2026 in Australia and Q4 in Europe.

The GI0 AI glasses: your face-worn assistant

If the GR0 is the spectacle, the GI0 is the subtle one – and honestly, the more forward-looking of the two products. It doesn’t have a display at all. There’s no screen to stare at, no augmented overlay floating in your vision. Instead, the GI0 puts Google Gemini in your ears and a 12-megapixel camera on your nose.

Acer GI0 AI glasses (GI100)
Image: Acer

The AI glasses space is increasingly crowded with exactly this design philosophy. Google announced its own Android XR audio glasses at I/O 2026, which use the same “Gemini in your ear, camera on your face” approach. Meta’s Ray-Ban AI frames have built a loyal following doing largely the same thing. The AI smart glasses market, valued at around $2.9 billion in 2025, is projected to reach $8.4 billion by 2035. Acer is entering at exactly the right time – when the concept has been validated, but the market hasn’t been locked up yet.

The GI0 weighs just 46 grams for the frames alone – lighter than most regular glasses you’d find at an optician. It connects wirelessly via Bluetooth 5.0 and Wi-Fi 5, runs through Acer’s own companion app called AspireSync, and is compatible with Android 12 and above or iOS 15 and above. Storage sits at 32GB internally, which gives you plenty of room for captured photos and videos before you sync anything to your phone.

The Gemini integration is where the device earns its “AI glasses” label. You can ask it questions, get real-time translations spoken back to you, generate live captions for conversations happening around you, and have it analyze images captured through the built-in 12MP camera. The visual analysis piece is particularly useful in practice – point the camera at a restaurant menu in another language, and Gemini reads the translation through the speakers before you’ve even reached for your phone. It’s the kind of feature that sounds like a party trick until you actually need it.

There’s also a voice recording function, which Acer pitches for meeting notes and conversation logging, plus a side touchpad and a physical capture button for photos and video. The button supports both short and long press functions, which gives you a bit of control without needing to fish out your phone mid-conversation.

Battery life with a 217mAh cell is the one area where expectations need to stay grounded. At that capacity, you’re looking at a device meant for shorter bursts rather than all-day sessions. It’s a familiar constraint across this product category – even Meta’s Ray-Ban glasses cap out at a few hours of active use. The upside is that charging is dead simple at 5V 1A, so a basic USB charger handles it.

The GI0 is priced at $299.99 in the US, €399 in Europe, and AUD 599 in Australia. That puts it squarely in the conversation with Meta’s Ray-Ban frames, which start at around $379.

What Acer is actually betting on

It’s worth stepping back and asking what Acer’s play actually is here. Acer is not a brand people typically associate with cutting-edge wearables – it’s a company known for reliable laptops and monitors. Entering the glasses space in 2026, when Meta, Google, and Samsung are all making moves, requires some confidence.

But the two-product strategy is smart. Rather than trying to do everything with one device – like early AR headsets that tried to be both display and AI assistant and failed at both – Acer has drawn a clear line. The GR0 is for people who want a big private screen on their face. The GI0 is for people who want an AI assistant that doesn’t require staring at anything. Different products, different buyers, different use cases.

The timing is also right. The AI smart glasses category is in its “second generation” phase right now – the weird prototype years are behind us, consumers understand the form factor, and Google’s I/O 2026 announcements just gave the whole category a major credibility boost. When the biggest software company in the world spends keynote time on smart glasses, it doesn’t just validate its own product – it validates the category for everyone in it.

Acer’s glasses won’t outsell the Ray-Bans or whatever Google ships this fall. But they don’t need to. A well-made AR viewer at $499 and a capable AI assistant at $299 – both with genuine specs and real software partnerships – is a solid opening move in a race that’s just getting started.


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