Meta Connect 2025 as it happend: Ray-Ban Gen 2, Oakley Vanguard, Meta Display glasses, and Zuckerberg running away with Diplo

Meta Connect 2025 as it happend: Ray-Ban Gen 2, Oakley Vanguard, Meta Display glasses, and Zuckerberg running away with Diplo

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Meta unveils the Orion prototype AR smart glasses

(Image credit: Future/Jacob Krol)

Hello, and welcome to our Meta Connect 2025 liveblog. I think this is going to be the most hardware-packed Connect event for a few years, so it’s definitely going to be worth a watch – whatever your thoughts on Meta and Mark Zuckerberg.

I’ll be taking you through what we can expect to see, the last-minute leaks and what this all means for smart glasses. Meta may have made a few missteps (remember the metaverse, anyone?), but you can’t deny it’s the current leader in face-mounted tech.

Let’s take a look at what’s likely coming our way in just under nine hours’ time…


What happened last year?

Meta Ray Ban transparent glasses

(Image credit: Lance Ulanoff / Future)

Is this your first Meta Connect? Here’s a recap of last year to give you an idea of what’s coming.

Firstly, don’t surprised if there’s a delay – last year, Mark Zuckerberg took to the stage a little after the scheduled start time.

Still, once he arrived, he rolled off a decent list of announcements. We got our first glimpse of the Orion AR glasses, Meta’s first holographic spectacles that are controlled with a wristband. Expect to hear more about those today.

We also saw the launch of the Meta Quest 3S, which we branded the “world’s best affordable VR headset” despite having inferior displays to its pricier Quest 3 sibling. Inevitably, we also got plenty of Meta AI news, including a new voice mode for its AI chatbot and AI image generation for Facebook and Instagram.

Personally, I’m not too fussed about Meta’s AI innovations compared to its Quest and smart glasses tech. Fortunately, it sounds like Connect 2025 is going to go pretty big on the latter…


What won’t we see at Connect 2025?

If you’re more a fan of VR headsets than smart glasses, there’s been mixed news in the rumors for this year’s Connect.

On the downside, it’s highly unlikely that we’ll see a Meta Quest 4. In fact, it’s reportedly been delayed until 2027, so you can cross that one off your bingo card (barring a major shock).

Still, there’s a chance we could hear more about the rumored Asus Tarius VR headset instead. TechRadar’s AR/VR expert Hamish Hector called it “the headset of my dreams” earlier this year, with the specs pointing to a high-end VR gaming headset.

That will also likely mean a high price, but an appearance from the “performance gaming headset” that Meta announced last year following its partnership with Asus ROG would be a very welcome substitute for Quest 4 news later. Fingers crossed.

A glimpse of what we could see

Hamish using the Snap Spectacles

(Image credit: Future)

Meta certainly doesn’t have the VR and AR space completely to itself – Snap is also turning itself into a surprisingly strong contender for the latter, as my colleague Hamish Hector discovered recently.

In a preview with Snap’s upgraded operating system for its Spectacles AR glasses, he was left convinced that “AR glasses will likely be the next big thing”. Snap OS 2.0 can give you tips on how to use objects in your vision, offers genuinely useful help with live translations and, naturally, serves up some pretty decent gaming experiences too.

With Snap promising to “introduce lightweight immersive Specs to the public next year”, it’ll be interesting to see how Meta responds today. Check out our full report on Snap’s quiet move into becoming an AR powerhouse while you wait for Meta’s keynote, it’s well worth a read. Or you can also watch the video below for a glimpse of what it’s like wearing them.

Hamish wearing the Oakley HSTN glasses

It’s me wearing Oakley smart glasses (Image credit: Future / Hamish Hector)

Howdy folks, Hamish Hector checking in and taking over the live blog. I’ll be with you until Meta Connect wraps up (so for the next eight hours or so).

Here at TechRadar I cover all things tech as part of our news team, but specialize in XR gadgets which includes VR headsets and smart glasses (basically the sort of tech we’ll see at Connect today).

As we approach the event’s start time (5pm PST which here in the UK is 1am BST, yuck) I’ll keep clueing you in on what I expoect we’ll see, and as the festivities kick off we’ll see if the leaks and my speculation are correct.

The Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses leaked trailer screenshots

(Image credit: Meta)

We mentioned in a post earlier that Meta might have actually spoiled its own Connect announcements thanks to a video it posted to its YouTube account this week.

The video showcased a few different glasses designs including the hotly anticipated Meta Ray-Bans with a display.

While the leaked advert teased a few details like a full-color screen which can provide useful info on a heads up display like a map for dicrections or real-time translations it didn’t reveal their full specs, nor how much the glasses would cost.

These are questiosn we’re hoping Meta will answer at Connect in a few hours.

There is another?

The Meta Ray-Ban Display glasses leaked trailer screenshots

(Image credit: Meta)

I’m reusing this leaked image to highlight a third pair of new smart glasses I think are hidden in plain sight: a new generation of Ray-Bans without a display.

I’ve been speculating such a pair of glasses will be revealed at Connect for some time now, ever since Meta launched its Oakley HSTN glasses that come with an upgraded battery and camera compared to the Ray-Bans that launched back in 2023.

The image above doesn’t immediately suggest the displayless Ray-Bans are getting an upgrade save for one subtle detail; Meta has yet to produce Ray-Ban smart glasses in an opaque blue frame like the one we see in the image.

This could just be cluing us into new styles coming the to Ray-Bans we alreday know and love, but my money is on a second generation of Ray-Bans as frankly it just makes too much sense – what with the HSTN upgrades, and incoming competition from rivals like Android XR in 2026 meaning Meta will want to put its best foot forward.

The audience is filling up

Lance has sent us more snaps from Connect, and the audience is now a lot more full. We’re getting closer to the start time and our excitement is definitely building.

Mark Zuckerberg is on stream, and he’s using AR glasses. We can see his perspective and it looks pretty great!

Meta Connect 2025

(Image credit: Future)

Zuck is hyping up glasses, I think we’re in for a specs heavy show folks.

Connect

(Image credit: Future)

Lightweight and comfortable glasses are definitely a must, I’ve tried so many smart spoecs that are awful to wear for longer than an hour. Zuckerberg is definitely onto something here.

Some AI updates are coming too.

This includes Live AI, which will be an always on AI that you can currently rely on for an hour of use. 23 hours shy of the “all day” use Zuckerberg is hoping to achieve one day.

We have a live cooking demo from Live AI showing a chef try to use the AI to prep a meal, but a “wi-fi problem” means we’ve had to cut it short… oops.

Two marathons on a single charge? Either you’re running a quick marathon Mark or these specs can truly go the distance.

I’d love to test that claim out. Zuckerberg claims “you can basically be standing in a wind tunnel and still come through clearly on the other side” when on a call using these Vanguard specs.

Preorders for Vanguard are live now ahead of October 21st, with prices starting at $499.

The full-color display appears in one eye, and looks to be full-color, just as the leaks promised.

They boast a 42pixel-per-degree resolution which should mean the screen is sharp too. I believe that’s sharper than the Quest 3.

This looks seriously impressive, Zuckerberg just wrote a message using his hand motions and the band. The demo worked this time!

Meta Connect 2025

(Image credit: Meta)

A video call fail? Mark Zuckerberg keeps trying to answer a video call but is messing it up, or is it another Wi-fi problem?

At least the music request worked, you win some, you lose some.

Fairplay to Mark Zuckerberg, he is playing this off very well despite some failures. I’m still impressed by the specs even with some tech troubles.

The first Meta AI glasses with a display will be landing on September 30, at $799. Again, just like the leaks predicted.

The Meta Quest 3S Xbox edition

(Image credit: Future)

AI creating immersive VR content, this is something I’ve been wondering if we’ll get from Meta, and it sounds like it’s about to deliver.

MARVEL’s DEADPOOL VR SPOTTED!

Cameron once agin talked about “what’s coming down the line” with regard to new VR hardware. Will we get a new VR headset this year?

A man plays Just Dance VR on a Meta Quest 3 VR headset.

(Image credit: Ubisoft)

Some big Quest glazing going on right now. The way Cameron is talking it sounds like the only way to watch films is on Quest.

Cameron is leaking hardware left and right. He really wants to talk about Meta’s upcoming headsets.

Do it James, tell us all about the Quest 4! It’s just us and the thousands watching the stream live. We can keep a secret.

This better be building to something.

I’m watching the stream view count drop and drop proving I’m not the only person who’s a bit bored right now.

An exclusive Avatar: Fire and Ash 3D clip is coming to Quest. Great.

That is how it ends. Not quite the one last thing I was hoping for I’ll be honest.

Live demo fails

Alongside learning about Meta’s new smart glasses we learned why you try to avoid live demos, as there were a lot of fails…

Here’s some TikTok clips of things going wrong for Meta so you can soak in the schadenfreude.


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