TechVRThe future of Apple’s Vision Pro is still blurryApple’s prescription lens plans are reportedly changing, but don’t sound any betterWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

TechVRThe future of Apple’s Vision Pro is still blurryApple’s prescription lens plans are reportedly changing, but don’t sound any betterWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

Apple’s prescription lens plans are reportedly changing, but don’t sound any better

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.

(Image credit: Apple)

Apple Vision Pro

(Image credit: Apple)

Vision Pro,Apple’s impressive and expensive mixed reality headset, has a big flaw if you wear glasses: in order to make it as thin as possible, Apple decided not to accommodate your specs. Instead, Apple decided to offer magnetic prescription lenses that attach to the headset – for an additional cost, of course.

There’s no doubt that accommodating glasses wearers requires the headset to be bigger: I have aPSVR 2and a Meta Quest and they’re both pretty bulky. But that’s okay, because I’d rather have screens I can see than a headset I can’t use at all.

Apple’s add-on lenses are not the most elegant solution andas I’ve written before, it’s highly unlikely that Apple will support as many different prescriptions as your local Specsavers. And according to Bloomberg’s well connected MarkGurman, “the process of offering thousands of different combinations has proven to be a headache for Apple’s operations team”. So Apple has come up with another solution: factory-fitted prescription lenses.

This is a terrible idea.

Apple’s lens plans seem short-sighted

The first and most obvious reason that this is a terrible idea is because if you build prescription lenses into a headset you limit who can wear it, and you massively reduce its resale value: instead of a headset you can share with others and sell on when Apple brings out the next one, you’ve got a headset that only you can see through and that most potential buyers won’t want.

And there’s another issue. As every glasses wearer knows, prescriptions change over time.

I really hope that either Apple thought about this and decided not to do it, or that someone in Apple is just messing with Gurman and telling him tall tales. Because at the moment it does look like Apple’s vision for Vision Pro is going to exclude an awful lot of people – not just now, while the device is very much for early adopters and developers with deep pockets, but also when more affordable versions become available. If Vision Pro really is a vision of computing’s future, it’d be nice if more of us could see it.

Sign up to the T3 newsletter for smarter living straight to your inbox

Get all the latest news, reviews, deals and buying guides on gorgeous tech, home and active products from the T3 experts

A man doing concentration bicep curls in the gym

Build bigger arms in just 30 minutes with this 5-move dumbbell-only workoutIt’ll leave the biceps and triceps popping!

It’ll leave the biceps and triceps popping!

OMEGA Speedmaster Moonphase Meteorite

OMEGA puts the moon on your wrist with its new Speedmaster Moonphase MeteoriteOMEGA adds two new Moonphase Meteorite watches to its Speedmaster line-up

OMEGA adds two new Moonphase Meteorite watches to its Speedmaster line-up