Even Realities G2 Just Solved the Biggest Problem With Smart Glasses… Using A Ring

Even Realities launched their first smart glasses last year with a pitch that felt almost countercultural: what if your eyewear didn’t record everything around you, didn’t pipe audio into your ears, and didn’t make everyone nearby wonder if you were filming them? Instead of packing their frames with cameras and speakers, they focused on a single function: a clean, effective heads-up display. The G1 glasses were a minimalist take on wearables, offering monochrome green text in your line of sight for notifications and AI assistance, all without the privacy concerns of outward-facing cameras. This focused approach found its niche, landing the G1 in 350 luxury eyewear shops globally and proving there’s a real appetite for smart glasses that prioritize subtlety and practical assistance.

The G2 glasses themselves improve on last year’s G1 in predictable but welcome ways. Bigger display, better optics, lighter frame, longer battery life. They still avoid cameras and speakers entirely, sticking with Even’s “Quiet Tech” philosophy of providing information without creating privacy concerns. But pair them with the new R1 ring and you get something more interesting than incremental hardware improvements. The ring lets you control the glasses with thumb gestures against your index finger, turning navigation into something closer to using a trackpad than fumbling with voice commands or head taps. Whether that’s actually more natural in practice than the alternatives depends partly on how well the gesture recognition works and partly on whether you’re the kind of person who wants to wear a ring in the first place.

Designer: Even Realities

The display improvements are significant enough to matter in daily use. Even calls their new system HAO 2.0, which stands for Holistic Adaptive Optics, and the practical result is that information appears in layers rather than as flat text plastered across your vision. Quick notifications and AI prompts sit closer in your field of view, while longer content like navigation directions or notes recede slightly into the background. It’s still monochrome green, the same matrix-style aesthetic from the G1, but sharper and easier to read in motion or bright light. The frame itself weighs just 36 grams and carries an IP67 rating for water and dust resistance, so you can wear them in the rain without worrying about killing a $599 investment. Battery life stretches past two days now, and the prescription range goes from -12 to +12, covering most people who need corrective lenses.

What made the G1 frustrating for some users was the interaction model. You could talk to the glasses, but that meant either looking weird in public or finding a quiet spot. You could tap the touch-sensitive nubs on the temples, but they were finicky and required you to constantly reach up to your face. While the G2 improves the reliability of those touchpads significantly, Even Realities’ R1 smart ring practically revolutionizes how you interact with the smart display. Worn on your index finger, the ring lets you swipe up and down with your thumb or tap to select options, essentially turning your hand into a trackpad for your face. The ring is made from zirconia ceramic and stainless steel, costs $249 separately, and connects to the glasses through what Even calls their TriSync ecosystem, linking the glasses, ring, and phone into one synchronized unit.

The gesture controls take some getting used to, based on early reviews. Accidental swipes are common at first, and the learning curve means you might fumble through menus for the first few days. But when it works smoothly, navigating with the ring is more subtle than any of the alternatives. You can check a notification, dismiss it, and move on without anyone noticing you’ve interacted with your glasses at all. That subtlety matters more than it sounds like it would, especially if you’re using features like the built-in teleprompter for presentations or the real-time translation during conversations. The glasses still support the old interaction methods too, so you’re not locked into one way of controlling them.

The AI side of things has been upgraded as well, with Even introducing what they call the Conversate assistant. It handles the usual smart glasses tasks like showing notifications, reading messages, and providing contextual information, but it’s designed to be less intrusive about it. You talk to it and get text responses on the display rather than audio, which keeps conversations private and avoids the awkwardness of having your glasses talk back to you in a quiet room. The system pulls from your phone’s connectivity, so there’s no separate data plan or complex setup required. The AI integration feels thoughtful rather than forced, providing information when you need it without constantly demanding attention.

One detail worth noting: the R1 ring is not compatible with the original G1 glasses. If you bought the first generation and want the ring’s functionality, you’ll need to upgrade to the G2 entirely. Even is offering a launch promotion where buying the G2 gets you the ring and other accessories at 50 percent off, which brings the combined price to $724 instead of $848. For context, Meta’s Ray-Ban smart glasses with their Neural Band controller and full-color display cost $799, though those come with cameras and all the privacy considerations that entails. The G2 and R1 combo sits in an interesting middle ground, offering more focused functionality at a similar price point.

The combination of display-only glasses and a gesture-controlled ring represents a particular vision of what smart eyewear could be. It’s not trying to replace your phone or capture every moment of your life. Instead, it extends your phone’s functionality into your field of view while giving you a discreet way to interact with that information. For people who give frequent presentations, the teleprompter feature alone could justify the cost. For travelers, having real-time translation floating in your vision during conversations is genuinely useful. And for anyone tired of constantly pulling out their phone to check notifications, the G2 offers a less disruptive alternative. Even Realities is refining an approach that feels increasingly relevant as smart glasses move from novelty to practical tool, and the G2 with R1 suggests they’re learning the right lessons from their first attempt.

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