By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
GamexploreGamexplore
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Game
  • Mobile
  • VR News
  • Hardware
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Upcoming
Reading: Chinese Startup Builds Chip To Enable Lightest Ever Headsets
Share
Notification
GamexploreGamexplore
Search
  • Home
  • News
  • PC Game
  • Mobile
  • VR News
  • Hardware
  • Guides
  • Reviews
  • Upcoming
Follow US
© 2025 All rights reserved | Powered by Gamexplore
Gamexplore > My Bookmarks > VR News > Chinese Startup Builds Chip To Enable Lightest Ever Headsets
VR News

Chinese Startup Builds Chip To Enable Lightest Ever Headsets

December 4, 2025 4 Min Read
Share
4 Min Read
Chinese Startup Builds Chip To Enable Lightest Ever Headsets
SHARE

A Chinese startup with former Apple and Meta engineers built a coprocessor that enables ultralight headsets, and its reference design is the lightest ever shown.

The startup is called GravityXR, and includes engineers who worked on the R1 chip at Apple, the coprocessor present in both Vision Pro headsets to date, as well as others who worked on hardware at Meta, Huawei, and Amazon.

GravityXR’s investors include Goertek, the Chinese company that manufactures Meta headsets, as well as ByteDance, the owner of Pico, and VC firms like Sequoia China and Lenovo Capital.

The chip that GravityXR built is called G-X100, and it’s designed to be onboard ultralight mixed reality headsets, handling the latency-sensitive image processing and computer vision tasks like presenting the camera passthrough feed, positional tracking, hand tracking, and reprojection, with just 9 milliseconds of photon-to-photon latency.

This allows the general purpose chipset, such as a Qualcomm Snapdragon, to be moved to a tethered external puck.

Another angle of the GravityXR M1 reference design headset.

With a TDP of just 3 watts, G-X100 can be passively cooled, eliminating the need for the heavy heatsinks and fans that make up a significant chunk of the weight of standalone headsets today, aiming to cool 10-20 watt chips.

To prove out this approach of using G-X100 to offload the primary chipset, GravityXR built a reference design headset called GravityXR M1. It’s a passthrough headset, using pancake lenses, displays, and cameras, yet weighs less than 100 grams.

That makes GravityXR M1 the lightest headset ever – lighter than even Bigscreen Beyond 2. In fact, its form factor arguably reaches the point that it might be better described as “mixed reality glasses”

See also  Animal Company Now Has 1 Million Monthly & 500K Daily Active Players

And unlike with birdbath devices like Xreal and Viture, GravityXR M1 has a field of view of 90 degrees, close to current VR headsets, and as a passthrough system can render virtual objects with full opacity without dimming your view.

Meta Prioritizing Ultra-Light Headset With Puck Over Traditional Quest 4

Meta is prioritizing shipping an ultralight Horizon OS headset with a tethered compute puck in 2026, and might not ship a new traditional form factor Quest until 2027.

To be clear, GravityXR M1 is just a reference design, and no company has yet publicly committed to using G-X100 in a headset.

But rumors suggest that both Meta and Pico intend to launch ultralight headsets next year, and both companies are likely to take a similar engineering path to what GravityXR is showing. Just last week, a Pico executive said that the company had developed its own R1-style chip internally, for example, and Meta has a multi-year partnership to work closely with Qualcomm, alongside its own custom chip teams.

It seems that, across the industry, mixed reality headsets are set to significantly shrink from half-kilogram facebricks into sleek glasses-like visors relatively soon. And a split-chip architecture, alongside an open periphery design that sacrifices some field of view, is how that remarkable jump will be possible.

You Might Also Like

VR Modder Luke Ross Removes All Mods Following ‘Cyberpunk 2077’ DMCA Takedown

The Best VR Games of 2025 – Our Game of the Year Picks

Co-Op Adventure Titan Isles Arrives This Month On Quest & Steam

A Fisherman's Tale Developer Announces New VR Spy Title

Loop One: Done Is A Roomscale Mixed Reality Sandbox About Automation

TAGGED:Virtual RealityVR
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Previous Article Arc Raiders expeditions explained Arc Raiders expeditions explained
Next Article Octopath Traveler 0 Review – The Power of Eight Octopath Traveler 0 Review – The Power of Eight
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Borderlands 4 - Story Pack 1 - Mad Ellie and the Vault of the Damned
Borderlands 4’s First Story Pack Launches on March 26th, Adds C4SH, Two New Bosses and Crazy Earl
News March 13, 2026
Games Executive Jason Rubin Leaves Meta After 12 Years
Games Executive Jason Rubin Leaves Meta After 12 Years
VR News March 13, 2026
Crimson Desert – 15 New Details That Have Us Excited
Crimson Desert – 15 New Details That Have Us Excited
PC Game March 13, 2026
All Marathon weapons in the Server Slam
All Marathon weapons in the Server Slam
PC Game March 13, 2026
If You Loved Space Marine 2, Toxic Commando Might Be Your Next Co-op Fix
If You Loved Space Marine 2, Toxic Commando Might Be Your Next Co-op Fix
Upcoming March 13, 2026
Crimson Desert_06
Crimson Desert Supports FSR 4 and DLSS 4.5 on PC, Online Connection Required for Initial Set-up
News March 12, 2026
Resident Evil 10 – 5 Ways It Could Build on Requiem
Resident Evil 10 – 5 Ways It Could Build on Requiem
PC Game March 12, 2026
gamexplore gamexplore
gamexplore gamexplore

Welcome to Gamexplore, your go-to destination for everything gaming. We are dedicated to delivering the latest updates, in-depth insights, and expert analysis from the ever-evolving gaming industry.

Editor Choice

Wanderstop review
Car Crushers 2 – Physics Sim codes (March 2025) [8X MAP SIZE]
MapleStory M opens new Steam demo ahead of crossplay Steam launch planned for March
Corsair Sabre V2 Pro Ultralight Wireless review – a nearly perfect ultra light gaming mouse

Trending News

November's Game Pass will test the limits of Microsoft's price hikes
Skate season 2 tweaks season pass, adds new co-op mode and challenges
Forza Motorsport Will Celebrate Franchise’s 20th Anniversary With the Return of Fujimi Kaido in May
What Is Going On With Unreal Engine 5?
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
Reading: Chinese Startup Builds Chip To Enable Lightest Ever Headsets
Share
© 2025 All rights reserved | Powered by Gamexplore
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?