Lenovo’s Legion Glasses 2 just became a lot easier to recommend, thanks to what looks like a permanent price drop. More than a year after Lenovo first introduced the AR glasses (also known as Legion Glasses Gen 2), the wearable display is now showing up at $249.99—down from its original $399.99 launch price.
What makes this price change especially notable is that it doesn’t appear to be a limited-time promotion. There’s no obvious “discount” labeling, and the same lower pricing is being reflected through official channels as well. In other words, this looks less like a temporary sale and more like Lenovo repositioning the Legion Glasses 2 at a much more competitive price point.
A quick look back shows how big the shift is. When Lenovo announced the Legion Glasses 2 at CES 2025, they arrived with a $399.99 MSRP. By June 2025, the price dipped to $329.99 for a period. Now, at $249.99, the glasses land $150 below the original list price—placing them in a range that may appeal to far more handheld gaming and portable productivity fans.
The Legion Glasses 2 are designed to act like a personal, portable “big screen” that you can take anywhere. They pair especially well with Lenovo’s Legion Go handheld lineup, where they can function like a large virtual monitor for gaming. However, you’re not locked into one ecosystem: they also work with other devices that support USB-C video output, making them useful for laptops, tablets, and compatible smartphones depending on the hardware.
On the specs side, Lenovo leans into a premium viewing experience. The Legion Glasses 2 use micro-OLED displays with a resolution of 1920 × 1080 per eye, a 120Hz refresh rate, and an ultra-high 200,000:1 contrast ratio. Peak brightness is rated at up to 800 nits, and the field of view sits at 43.5°. When connected to a compatible device such as the Legion Go S, Lenovo says the glasses can simulate a virtual screen up to 126 inches—an attention-grabbing number for anyone who wants a cinema-like view without carrying a monitor.
Lenovo also built in features that make the glasses more practical for everyday sessions. They include built-in speakers and dual microphones, and they’re lightweight at just 65 grams, which matters for comfort during longer gaming or streaming binges. There’s also a dedicated control for switching between 2D and 3D modes, adding flexibility for supported content.
In the box, Lenovo includes accessories meant to make the experience more convenient right away: a carrying case for travel, a magnetic light shield to improve viewing in bright environments, multiple nose pads, an anti-slip adapter, and even a prescription lens frame for users who need vision correction.
At $249.99, the Legion Glasses 2 feel much closer to their “sweet spot” for shoppers who’ve been curious about AR display glasses but didn’t want to spend close to $400. If you’ve been looking for a portable virtual monitor for a USB-C device—especially for handheld gaming—this new pricing could be the moment where Lenovo’s AR glasses finally move from “interesting” to “easy to justify.”






