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AppleLogitechTechVision Pro

Logitech Muse brings Apple Pencil-like precision to the Vision Pro

The Logitech Muse stylus for Vision Pro makes drawing and 3D creation feel more like using a real pen, complete with haptic feedback and force-sensing controls.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
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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Oct 19, 2025, 1:14 AM EDT
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Logitech Muse stylus for Apple Vision Pro
Image: Logitech
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Logitech’s newest accessory looks like a chunky graphite stick and behaves like a tiny spatial controller — and it’s trying to solve a problem Apple didn’t: precision. The Muse, a “digital pencil” built for Apple’s Vision Pro, is Logitech’s answer to creators who hate sketching in mid-air with bare fingers and want the fidelity of a pen for drawing, annotating, and manipulating 3D shapes. Logitech first announced Muse in June; it’s now up for preorder and will ship alongside the Vision Pro later this month.

Think of Muse as a Vision Pro controller dressed up like a pen. It offers six-degree-of-freedom tracking so your strokes track through space, a pressure-sensitive tip (so you can vary stroke weight), a force-sensing button for on-the-fly thickness changes while drawing in the air, and real-time haptics to give the stylus a tactile feel as you sketch. Logitech pitches it as the bridge between the imprecision of mid-air hand gestures and the control you get from a traditional stylus.

Those aren’t marketing buzzwords only — the Muse’s spec sheet explicitly lists pressure sensitivity, haptic feedback, swappable tips, and Bluetooth pairing. Logitech also notes the pen supports multiple grip styles and is tuned for both 2D surface drawing and 3D open-air creation.

Logitech put a concrete number on it: Muse is $129.95 (U.S.) and is available to preorder from Logitech and the Apple Store in markets where Vision Pro is sold. Logitech says shipments start October 22. Apple’s own product pages also list Muse as available to order alongside Vision Pro on that same date.

Logitech Muse stylus for Apple Vision Pro
Image: Logitech

This isn’t Logitech’s first pen for spatial headsets. Last year, the company released the MX Ink for Meta Quest headsets — visually similar and priced in the same ballpark. The practical difference: MX Ink shipped with an Inkwell charging dock (and can also charge via USB-C), while Muse charges only via USB-C and doesn’t include a dock. That design choice makes the Muse simpler out of the box but also a little easier to misplace — which is an occupational hazard for any seeker of tiny accessories.

Other nitty-gritty differences are button layout and some firmware tie-ins for each platform, but the core idea is the same: make 3D drawing and precise selection comfortable and familiar.

A pen is only as useful as the apps that understand pressure and force. Logitech and Apple say several visionOS apps — including drawing and modeling tools — will add Muse support in the coming weeks, so expect creators’ apps (the likes of Crayon, Sketch Pro and some spatial modeling tools) to pick up functionality that maps pressure to opacity, force to thickness, and haptics to on-screen texture. That’s how Muse becomes more than a fancy remote: it becomes a precision input.

There are clear wins: if you do any kind of detailed work in spatial apps — sketching concepts, annotating 3D scans, or painting in the air — the Muse will feel dramatically better than pinching and swiping with your fingers. The pressure sensitivity and force button let the pen feel closer to a pencil or marker than a controller, and the haptics add feedback that helps your hand-eye coordination in opaque space.

But there are downsides. Battery life is limited by the same small form factor that makes Muse comfortable (Logitech lists up to roughly a workday of use), and without a dock, you’ll rely on a cable for charging and a habit for keeping track of it. For professionals who move between workstations, a dock or a lanyard accessory will suddenly look very appealing.

Spatial computing is at its awkward teenage stage: hardware is getting powerful, but interfaces still need practical refinement. Apple’s hand gestures are elegant for many things, but not for fine, sustained drawing or precise CAD-style edits. Muse isn’t just another peripheral — it signals that accessory makers see a sizable subset of Vision Pro users who will prefer dedicated input devices for serious work. Logitech shipping a pen-controller at scale is a vote of confidence that visionOS will be used for more than passive media viewing.

If you’ve been waiting for a reason to take art or design work into Vision Pro seriously, Muse makes that leap plausible. At $129.95, it’s not a trivial extra, but it’s cheap compared with most professional creative tools — and cheaper than buying a second headset just to run spatial software. Just don’t lose it: bring a little pouch or magnetic holder, because unlike the Apple Pencil’s smart pairing and various docks in the wild, Muse expects you to remember where you put it.


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