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URXR One vs ROG XREAL R1: Work Glasses or Gaming Glasses?

The ROG XREAL R1 is a 240 Hz gaming display with built-in Bose speakers. The URXR One is a higher-resolution spatial workspace for everything else you do all day. Here is which one fits you.

Verdict

The ROG XREAL R1 is a 240 Hz gaming display with built-in Bose speakers, and for fast play on a ROG Ally or PC it is excellent. The URXR One is built for the rest of your day: a much higher-resolution, wider 90° screen with 6DoF and hand gestures for documents, multitasking, and spatial work.

Spec Comparison

Spec URXR One ROG XREAL R1
Price $899 ($799 Kickstarter) $849
Per-eye resolution 2448 × 2064 1920 × 1080
Field of view 90° 57°
PPD ROG XREAL R1 PPD is an estimate. XREAL does not publish an official figure. 36 ~38–39
Refresh rate 90 Hz 240 Hz
Weight 93 g 91 g
Tracking 3DoF + 6DoF (free app) 3DoF native (6DoF needs XREAL Eye, +$100)
Hand gestures Standard No native gesture input
See-through VST, <10 ms None (electrochromic dimming)
Built-in speakers No Yes (Bose)

What is the difference between the URXR One and the ROG XREAL R1?

They are tuned for different jobs. The ROG XREAL R1 is a gaming-focused display built around speed. Its headline number is a 240 Hz refresh rate with a claimed 3 ms motion-to-photon latency, and it ships with built-in speakers tuned by Bose so you can play without headphones. The URXR One is a spatial workspace built around clarity and interaction. It runs a much higher 2448 × 2064 per eye across a 90° field of view, tracks in 6DoF, and reads hand gestures for input. So the honest framing is not that one is better, but that they optimise for opposite priorities. The R1 chases frames for fast play; the URXR One chases pixels and spatial control for work you spend hours inside.

Which is better for gaming?

For fast, competitive gaming the ROG XREAL R1 has the edge, and its 240 Hz refresh rate is the reason. That is nearly three times the URXR One’s 90 Hz, and in twitch games higher frame rates translate directly into smoother motion and lower perceived lag. The R1 also plugs straight into a ROG Ally over USB-C, connects to a PC or console through the ROG Control Dock, and its built-in Bose speakers mean you can start playing without pairing earbuds. The URXR One can absolutely display games, and its sharper, wider screen looks superb for slower and story-driven titles, but it runs at 90 Hz and has no built-in speakers. If your priority is high-frame-rate competitive play on a handheld or PC, the R1 is the more focused tool.

Which is better for work and multiple screens?

For work the URXR One is the stronger device by a wide margin. It runs 2448 × 2064 per eye against the R1’s 1920 × 1080, and 90° of field of view against 57°, so it shows far more sharp text and far more usable canvas at once. That difference is felt immediately when you read code, edit documents, or arrange several windows side by side. The R1’s 1080p panel and narrower field of view are perfectly good for a single game window, but they get cramped for multi-screen productivity. The URXR One also places windows in space with 6DoF, so you can anchor a monitor over your desk and a browser to your left and keep them fixed as you move. For a full working day rather than a gaming session, the URXR One is built for the task.

How do tracking and controls compare?

The URXR One leads on both tracking and input, and it does so without add-ons. It handles 3DoF and 6DoF and treats hand gestures as a standard way to interact, so windows stay anchored in real space and you can reach out to control them. The ROG XREAL R1 is natively a 3DoF device. It can reach 6DoF, but only with the separate XREAL Eye accessory, which adds about $100 to the price, and it has no native gesture input, so multi-screen behaviour depends on host software. For gaming that mostly locks a screen in front of you, 3DoF is often all you need, and the R1 is honest about what it is. For spatial multitasking, where you want windows to hold their place around you and respond to your hands, the URXR One gives you that in the box.

What about audio, weight, and price?

These smaller differences favour the R1 on convenience and the URXR One on capability. The ROG XREAL R1 has built-in speakers tuned by Bose, weighs 91 g against the URXR One’s 93 g, and costs $849 against $899, so it is marginally lighter, marginally cheaper, and more convenient for grab-and-go audio. The URXR One makes a deliberate trade in the other direction. It has no built-in speakers and no built-in battery, which keeps the frame light while it carries full spatial hardware, and audio runs through Bluetooth earbuds instead. Neither device has an internal battery, so both draw power from whatever they connect to. If self-contained sound and the lowest price matter most, the R1 wins those points. If resolution, field of view, and spatial control matter more, the URXR One earns its small premium.

Which should you buy, the URXR One or the ROG XREAL R1?

Buy the ROG XREAL R1 if gaming is the point. Its 240 Hz refresh rate, low latency, ROG Ally and PC connectivity, and built-in Bose speakers make it a focused, well-priced gaming display at $849. Buy the URXR One if you want one pair of glasses for the whole day. At $899 it gives you 2448 × 2064 per eye, a 90° field of view, 6DoF, and hand gestures, which suit documents, multitasking, and spatial work far better than a 1080p gaming panel. Keep the URXR One’s fine print in mind: it ships Fall 2026 to the US and Canada only, needs URXR Connect on Windows or Mac for Companion mode, and does not support SteamVR at launch. The clean way to think about it is simple. R1 for competitive gaming, URXR One for everything else you do all day.

For the complete hardware breakdown, see the full URXR One spec sheet. If you are comparing more options, read our URXR One vs XREAL Aura and URXR One vs Viture Beast breakdowns.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the URXR One or the ROG XREAL R1 better?

It depends on the job. The ROG XREAL R1 is the better buy for fast-paced gaming thanks to its 240 Hz refresh rate and built-in Bose speakers. The URXR One is the better buy for work and multitasking, with a much higher 2448 × 2064 resolution, a wider 90° field of view, 6DoF, and hand gestures.

Does the ROG XREAL R1 support 6DoF tracking?

Not natively. The ROG XREAL R1 provides 3DoF tracking on its own; 6DoF requires the separate XREAL Eye accessory, which costs about $100 more. The URXR One handles both 3DoF and 6DoF and adds hand-gesture control as standard.

Which has the higher refresh rate?

The ROG XREAL R1 has the higher refresh rate at 240 Hz, versus 90 Hz on the URXR One, which is a real advantage for competitive gaming. The URXR One counters with far higher resolution at 2448 × 2064 per eye and a wider 90° field of view for documents and multi-screen work.

Does the URXR One have built-in speakers?

No. The URXR One has no built-in speakers and no built-in battery; audio runs through Bluetooth earbuds. The ROG XREAL R1 includes built-in speakers tuned by Bose, which is more convenient for gaming without headphones.