Razer Anzu Smart Glasses: Blue Light Filtering & Polarized Sunglass Lenses – Low Latency Audio – Built-in Mic & Speakers – Touch & Voice Assistant Compatible – 5hrs Battery – Rectangle/Small

$57.30

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Price: $57.30
(as of Dec 29, 2024 23:40:31 UTC – Details)


Rethink eyewear with the Razer Anzu—cutting-edge audio glasses that protect your eyes and immerse your ears. With built-in speakers hidden in its frame, taking in the sights and sounds now has a whole new meaning. Available in two types of frames and two sizes.
Blue Light Filtering and Polarized Sunglass Lenses Included: Its blue light filter lessens screen glare to protect your eyes, reducing eyestrain so they feel fresh and focused while enjoying entertainment or working, while the polarized replacement lens shields your eyes from the sun
Low Latency Audio: Its industry-leading 60ms Bluetooth connection delivers smooth, stutter-free sound that allows you to stay immersed without any disruptions from audio delay or skipping
Built-in Mic and Speakers: With the Razer Anzu, you can go hands-free when taking calls thanks to a discreet omnidirectional mic built into its frame
Touch-Enabled and Voice-Assistant Compatible: Change music tracks, play or pause media, manage calls, and activate your smartphone’s voice assistant—all from the glasses’ sleek touch interface
More than 5 hours of battery life: With this much mileage on a single charge, it’ll never run out during long gaming sessions. When folded up and not in use, it conserves power by shutting off automatically

Customers say

Customers find the sunglasses well-made and stylish. They appreciate the good sound quality and sun protection. However, some customers have issues with durability and have mixed opinions on sound quality, value for money, battery life, fit, and comfort.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

10 reviews for Razer Anzu Smart Glasses: Blue Light Filtering & Polarized Sunglass Lenses – Low Latency Audio – Built-in Mic & Speakers – Touch & Voice Assistant Compatible – 5hrs Battery – Rectangle/Small

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  1. Shawn

    Amazing!
    For 40 bucks on sale these are absolutely amazin. Even for the 200 price tag i would pick these up. PROS: Great sound quality, I have never tried open ear audio and have heard a lot of bad things with certain open audio earbuds etc. but these sound amazing Another pro is how fast this thing charges really fast and they last a good bit of time; would like to see more battery life tho (it’s honestly do able) The polarized subglass lenses arw super clear and are not too dark. The fit and build quality is also very good. CONS: the only con is the 200 price tag when not on sale, i mean honestly there worth it but not everyone would want to spend that much money on these, but for 40 bucks these are unbeatable. Only other con is the 5 hour battery life but that’s only if ur using them for calls or music. Overall for the 40 price on sale don’t hesitate to buy these it’s so worth it 10/10, for the 200 dollar price tag 10/10 if you dont mind the price, GREAT JOB RAZER!!!!

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  2. Taylor Davidson

    Made work 1000x better
    After getting caught one too many times with my earbud in at work, I decided to buy a pair of these as they are not banned. They let me listen to music, podcasts, and audiobooks inconspicuously. Sound quality is decent, though lacking in bass, but I think that’s just an implication of these kinds of speakers. Really my only complaint is battery life, but I just charged them on break, so they would last through my shift.

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  3. Hewdiddy

    Great for specific uses
    I bought the Anzus, and have had them for a week. You should ignore any review that just got them that day and haven’t had them long enough to learn what they don’t like.The Razer Anzus. Read the other reviews for battery life and connectivity, I’m going to talk about what actually matters, if you will like them or not. The most important thing to determine here is what you’re going to use the Razer Anzu for. They are amazing in some roles, and terrible in others. Do not buy the Anzus if you want them for the following:-Being blue light blocking glasses-Being sunglasses-Being good for music, movies, or TV audioWith that out of the way, what are they good for? They are probably the single best way to participate in conference calls, Zoom meetings, and working from home, that I’ve tried. The microphone quality is exceptionally good, but there is no mic in front of your face. That’s pretty much unheard of. They are more comfortable than any headset, ear bud, etc (my second favorite device for this is the Aftershokz OpenComm btw). Your ears are open so you can hear the doorbell, dog barking, spouse nagging, etc. You can wear them all day even when you’re not on a call, there is no need to take them off. I listen to music all day when not in calls; before the Anzu, I either had to listen to music on something that didn’t sound as good (like a normal Bluetooth headset), or take the headset off after every call. With the Anzu I put them on in the morning, and take them off at the end of the day. The only better way to do this is to use speakers and a desktop microphone (which I also do sometimes), but then you can’t go upstairs to make coffee during a meeting.The other thing they are great for I will generally describe as being “connected,” or maybe “smart watch replacement.” If you are anything like me, you always miss calls when your phone is in your pocket. A lot of you are using smart watches, and that works. I don’t like smart watches. But if I know an important call might be coming in, wearing these glasses is a great way to be alerted without having my phone in my hand. If you don’t like smart watches but want to know about every notification, these are the ticket. Could you wear Airpods all day with nothing playing? Sure. But wearing glasses you forget about after 2 minutes is much less annoying, says me.Now the bad. I am a huge fan of computer glasses (I have been using Gunnars for 10 years). The blue light lenses in the Anzus do nothing to block blue light (like all clear blue light lenses). 35% blocking is a lie (like all 35% blocking blue light lenses, which are all clear). This may be a controversial statement, but its physics. If a lens is blocking blue light, the resulting image will have more yellow/orange in it. These are crystal clear. If the lens isn’t yellow or orange, they are not blocking blue light, period. They may be blocking ALL light, which just means they are making everything dark.That said, examine why you need blue light blocking glasses. Blue light is not bad for your eyes (proven). It does keep you up at night. If you want to block blue light for your eye health, you’ve been sold snake oil (its ok, a lot of us were). If you want to block blue light so you can fall asleep better, that’s valid, but every operating system now can turn amber at a scheduled time or based on sunset, and that accomplishes the same thing.Based on my experience, the discomfort I experience using a computer monitor without glasses isn’t because of blue light, its because of dryness. Any glasses resolve this for me. I replaced my Gunnars with the Anzus and did not experience discomfort. As a comparison, if I don’t wear any glasses at the computer, my eyes start to bother me because I’m so used to the Gunnars. So, if you want them for blue-light blocking, they aren’t that. If you want them for eye comfort while using the computer, they might help.I haven’t tried the sunglass lenses. I’m too much of a sunglass snob to use Razer sunglasses. If you don’t care about sunglasses they are probably fine, but I would choose one or the other (clear or sunglass). I wouldn’t rely on switching the lenses a lot because I’m afraid they would get loose or break. If you want that, buy two pairs.Finally, the other “bad” thing, the sound. The sound is “fine.” It is great for voice, so if you want to do calls or podcasts, you’re good to go. If you want to listen to music, only use these if you don’t care about sound quality (which based on the sales numbers for Beats, Skullcandy, etc, is a lot of you). Because the drivers are tiny and there is no seal with your ear, you will get no bass or low end, and they also don’t reveal much detail in the music. They are fine for a little bit here or there, but I would not recommend these as a primary headphone replacement for music. Full disclosure, I am probably an “audiophile,” so take this with a grain of salt; many of you would probably be happy with these for music, but I’m not.Finally, they come with a charging cable. It is very hard to find, nestled in the leather case in a hidden pocket. Don’t write a negative review saying they didn’t come with a cable because you couldn’t find it.

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  4. Highlanderstorm

    Great glasses
    Very good brand product ,sound is pure and loud,optic is very good not too dark,easy bluetootch paring .

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  5. Brenju

    Good for casual use
    Have been using this Smart Glasses for a few weeks now, and while they have some great features, they fall short in a few key areas.Pros:Blue Light Filtering & Polarized Lenses: The lenses are great for reducing eye strain from screens and providing sun protection when outdoors. It’s nice having both options available, and the transition between lenses is pretty simple.Low Latency Audio: No significant lag between the audio and what’s happening on-screen.Built-in Mic & Speakers: Sound is clear enough for casual use.Cons:Battery Life: The advertised 5-hour battery life feels a bit short, especially when using the glasses for extended periods throughout the day. I found myself needing to charge them more frequently than expected.Fit & Comfort: The frame can feel tight, especially if you wear it for long stretches.Audio Quality: While functional, the sound quality is not as immersive as traditional headphones or earbuds. The speakers are a bit lacking in bass, and in noisy environments, it can be hard to hear clearly.Overall:Some handy features, but they don’t fully deliver in terms of comfort and battery life. They’re good for casual use but may not be the best option for all-day wear or for those looking for premium audio.

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  6. Cliente de Kindle

    El sonido es ideal para espacios cerrados, casi imperceptible para las personas que se encuentren alrededor, pero para exteriores como puede ser una calle muy transitada el sonido es moderadamente audible. El armazón es grueso pero liviano y no molesta el tabique nasal cuando se tienen por varias horas.

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  7. Rogelio

    Funcionan muy bien en cuestión de audio, y micrófono. Utilizándolos en llamadas en exterior es sonido es claro y las personas te escuchan claramente. La batería si tiene poca duración, aproximadamente de medio día con uso normal y en llamada o película aproximadamente 2hrs.Los e utilizado como lentes graduados y sin problema quedan las micas. El único inconveniente es que después de un rato de utilizarlos se vuelven molestos y comienzan a lastimar en las orejas.Fuera de eso son bueno y los recomiendo, los seguiré utilizando y quizá cambie mi reseña más adelante.

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  8. Ana

    Los compré para mi novio y la verdad es que le gustaron muchísimo. Estáb super y buena calidad, el audio de la bocina está muuuy bueno, que me atrevo a decir que tiene cierta cancelación de ruido porque sí se escucha muy bien (para canciones). El micrófono también funciona en llamadas, ya que cuando me ha marcado con ellos puestos se escucha clarito.El único pero que le puso mi novio es que para jugar el audio le quedó a deber pero a él le encantan tener sus headsets a todo volumen jajajaja. Fue una buena compra, yo creo que hasta puedes graduar micas y ponérselas porque esas en sí no tienen ninguna función tecnológica.

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  9. Flip

    I bought this anzu smart glasses. I love it glasses itself are amazing. Sounds is great better than Rayban stories where it is more expensive than Razer Anzu.My biggest issue now is I bought this anzu smart glasses last May 2022, now its May 2023 after one year of usage the aterry charge doesn’t hold anymore. 10min to 15 min of watching movie with minimum volume the battery notification will appear 10% low battery, even I keep it over night charging it wil not hold the battery charge.I tried to contact support but there is so many things to do/click on the website where it doesnt make sense at all in the end I wont be able to get a phone number/chat/email to talk to them.

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  10. Amazon Customer

    Had always seen these and their Bose competitors and wanted them, but at their launch price of $200 USD they seemed too pricey for my blood – plus, I had some freebie shades that worked perfectly fine. Once they finally broke, I saw that these had dropped to $50 CAD – and at that point, the value proposition becomes much nicer.For $50 CAD you get a unique looking pair of shades that allows for:> Hands-free calling – you may look a bit loony just talking to open air, but the use is nice to be able to have open-ear hands-free calling. Especially for those who have long calls or talk over apps like Discord or Slack often, these have surprisingly good mics built in and free up your ears nicely.> Open air listening to music/podcasts while walking, reading and otherwise living life – very nice to be able to walk by a friend on the street on a bright summer day, have a full conversation and then keep on going without having to pause your music or podcast once.> Switchable lenses – polarized UV rated lenses for the outdoors and blue-blockers for the late night Excel crunching and competitive game crushing.A few cons though:> Touch Control (or lack thereof) – the controls are the most abysmally insensitive things I’ve had to use. Since they’re sleek plastic, the actual touch area is hard to find but through use it’s about a +/- 0.5cm around the little hump they have to help you find it. In general, a hard touch will actually be seen as a tap, a double tap has a 80/20 chance of not registering as a double tap and you’ll have to hold for dear life to get the hold action to function. A novel idea but a horrible execution. Also damning is the facts that in all the tap/2-tap/3-tap/hold actions there isn’t one to control the volume – so you’ll have to fish for your device anyways to change that.> Sounds quality – no matter what, we can’t beat physics. These are essentially down-firing speakers built into the frame. Walk past an especially noisy overhead pass and nothing is going to be heard. Indoors, if someone is sitting right beside you they’ll at lease hear *something* playing i not be able to discern exactly what it is.> Lenses – The lenses themselves are nice and they are easy to pop in and out – the issue is that if you’d like to get prescriptions you can only go to their partnered provider Lensabl. From my more visually impaired homies, apparently their prices aren’t unreasonable (starting from $98 the last I checked), but once they stop carrying them you may be SOL.> Battery Life – once again, can’t beat physics. Max battery life is indeed the quoted 5 hours, and if you essentially use them walking to and from destinations you’ll never run out within a day or two. Continuously will kill them before lunch. Now, for my colder Canucks out there, I can unfortunately tell you exactly what temperature these bad boys die at: -20C without wind chill. Anything lower and these will IMMEDIATELY shut off. There have been the off day where they battle the cold for 20 minutes before flying the white flag and dying unceremoniously, but in general its a fool’s gambit to try using these in the winter.Now that may all sound like a very big cons list – and for $200 USD I would have been punching the sky in rage over such a purchase. But for $50 CAD? When a good pair of Aviators cost as much, a pair of Raybans costs an arm and and leg and cheap pairs doomed to die within two years, these at this price becomes the steal of the decade.

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    Razer Anzu Smart Glasses: Blue Light Filtering & Polarized Sunglass Lenses – Low Latency Audio – Built-in Mic & Speakers – Touch & Voice Assistant Compatible – 5hrs Battery – Rectangle/Small
    Razer Anzu Smart Glasses: Blue Light Filtering & Polarized Sunglass Lenses – Low Latency Audio – Built-in Mic & Speakers – Touch & Voice Assistant Compatible – 5hrs Battery – Rectangle/Small

    $57.30

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