Watch out, Meta – Snap just gave its AR glasses a big upgrade, and I was shocked by how good they are

Hamish using the Snap Spectacles
(Image credit: Future)

Meta Connect 2025 is barely two days away at the time of writing, but Snap’s latest AR glasses update is threatening to make me forget all about Meta before it even has a chance to showcase its new tech.

Snap’s current top-end Spectacles AR glasses are among the most technically impressive gadgets I’ve been able to demo. Unfortunately they’re intended for developers, meaning they aren’t yet available to regular folks, and they're neither particularly stylish nor cheap.

Thankfully, Snap promises to "introduce lightweight immersive Specs to the public next year,” and ahead of that launch I got to demo the upgraded operating system – complete with some new apps and tools – that will bring its AR glasses to life.

Boy was I impressed.

My Snap OS 2.0 demo began with the spatial tips app – a feature powered by AI. It starts out much like the Look and Ask tool on Meta’s smart glasses, which lets you ask the glasses to tell you about the things they can see.

Thanks to their displays, Snap’s AR glasses could in fact label everything of not in my vision with surprising accuracy – including a custom ‘modular couch’ in the shape of the Snap logo.

It takes things a step further by also providing me with tips on how to use objects when asked. For example, I asked for a trick I could try using a yellow skateboard the office had as decoration (though unfortunately I wasn’t able to follow the instructions as the demo organiser was, perhaps rightly, worried I might injure myself).

Hamish wearing the Snap Spectacles playing with an AR flamingo

(Image credit: Snap)

We then move onto the Specs’ AR translation tools.

The first demo was cool, but a tad on the basic side. I could drag my hand over a menu written in Mandarin to highlight it and then have the glasses provide me with a translation of what it says.

I call this 'basic' because while the app was very easy to use, the translation appeared in a separate window rather than next to the menu or overlaid like with, say, the Google translation tools on my phone. In the real world this AR setup would make it difficult to know which translation corresponded to which item on the menu – though I appreciate this app is still a work in progress, so I hope an update will help solve my one gripe.

The live conversation translations, however, were a dream. As my host spoke in Mandarin, I saw a line of English text automatically appear below their head like real-life subtitles.

What's especially neat is that app can support more than two users, and can translate over 40 languages. So you could have a small group of people all talking in their native languages, and each person (provided they’re using Snap’s AR glasses) would see translated subtitles in the language they understand.

Seeing the demo in action was like seeing into the future – a feeling Snap’s AR glasses gave me the last time I demoed them.

Meta Orion Hands On

Meta's Orion glasses are still likely years away (Image credit: Future / Lance Ulanoff)

Lastly, I got to experience some new games like Synth Riders – an AR rhythm game ported from the VR version – and browse the internet and videos on Snap’s Spotlight platform.

Nothing here was especially mind-blowing, but these are the sorts of day-to-day tools that will help make consumer AR specs feel like a generally useful tool, rather than a hyper-specialized device.

I could imagine myself digitally flicking through the news on my AR glasses’ browser while eating my breakfast each morning.

The AR future is coming

Hamish using the Snap Spectacles

(Image credit: Future)

This demo reaffirmed my belief that AR glasses will likely be the next big thing – maybe even supplanting smartphones as our go-to gadget in the next decade or sooner.

Sure, the hardware is a little goofy looking right now, but the utility Snap’s Spectacles provided me – and also the inventive social interactions they facilitate – more than made up for how silly they might make me look.

And as the tech improves, they should only get slimmer and more normal looking.

Snap’s rivals should be on notice, especially meta as Connect is fast approaching, as the AR revolution is coming, and at least one of the players aiming for the top spot is already bringing its A-game.

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Hamish Hector
Senior Staff Writer, News

Hamish is a Senior Staff Writer for TechRadar and you’ll see his name appearing on articles across nearly every topic on the site from smart home deals to speaker reviews to graphics card news and everything in between. He uses his broad range of knowledge to help explain the latest gadgets and if they’re a must-buy or a fad fueled by hype. Though his specialty is writing about everything going on in the world of virtual reality and augmented reality.

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