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Magic Leap 2

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Revision as of 15:40, 7 January 2026 by Betabot (talk | contribs) (Improving page with detailed specifications, sections, and references)
Magic Leap 2
Basic Info
VR/AR Augmented Reality
Type AR Glasses
Subtype Enterprise AR
Platform Magic Leap OS
Developer Magic Leap
Manufacturer Magic Leap
Release Date September 2022
Price $3,299 USD (Base), $4,099 USD (Developer Pro), $4,999 USD (Enterprise)
Website https://www.magicleap.com/magic-leap-2
Predecessor Magic Leap One
System
Chipset AMD Zen 2 (Custom 7nm quad-core)
Storage
Storage 256 GB
Memory 16 GB
Display
Display 2x LCOS (Liquid Crystal on Silicon)
Resolution 1440x1760 per eye
Refresh Rate 120 Hz
Image
Field of View 70° diagonal (45° H x 55° V)
Optics
Ocularity Binocular
Tracking
Tracking 6DoF (inside-out)
Eye Tracking Yes (4 cameras, 2 per eye)
Hand Tracking Yes
Audio
Audio Integrated speakers
Connectivity
Connectivity Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.0, USB-C
Device
Weight 260g (headset only)

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The Magic Leap 2 is an enterprise augmented reality head-mounted display developed by Magic Leap, released in September 2022 as the successor to the Magic Leap One. The headset represents a major improvement over its predecessor with a 70° diagonal field of view (nearly double the original), higher resolution LCOS displays at 1440x1760 per eye, 120 Hz refresh rate, and significantly reduced weight at only 260g. The Magic Leap 2 features innovative Dynamic Dimming technology that adjusts real-world light transmission to make AR content appear more solid and visible, even in bright environments.

History and Development

Magic Leap launched the Magic Leap 2 in September 2022, pivoting from the consumer focus of its predecessor to target enterprise customers exclusively. After the Magic Leap One failed to meet consumer expectations, the company restructured under CEO Peggy Johnson and refocused on business applications in healthcare, manufacturing, defense, and design.[1]

The Magic Leap 2 was designed from the ground up for extended professional use, featuring a dramatically lighter headset (260g vs 316g), improved field of view, and enterprise-specific features like Dynamic Dimming and enhanced security.[2]

Design and Hardware

Display

Significant improvements over Magic Leap One:

  • 2x LCOS (Liquid Crystal on Silicon) displays
  • 1440x1760 resolution per eye (~2.5M pixels per eye)
  • 120 Hz refresh rate
  • 70° diagonal field of view (vs 50° on ML1)
  • Approximately 45° horizontal, 55° vertical FOV
  • Up to 2,000 nits brightness
  • Dynamic Dimming technology

Dynamic Dimming

Innovative feature for enterprise AR:

  • Adjusts real-world light transmission in real-time
  • Makes AR content appear more solid and opaque
  • Works effectively in bright lighting conditions
  • Global and segmented dimming modes
  • Reduces eye strain
  • Industry-first technology

Processing

Segmented computing architecture:

  • Custom AMD Zen 2 quad-core SoC (7nm)
  • Headset handles low-latency tasks
  • Compute Pack handles intensive processing
  • 16 GB RAM (double ML1)
  • 256 GB storage (double ML1)
  • Distributes workload for efficiency

Form Factor

Dramatically improved ergonomics:

  • 260g headset weight (lighter than ML1)
  • External Compute Pack (waist or pocket-worn)
  • Improved weight distribution
  • Designed for extended professional use
  • Multiple fit options

Tracking

Advanced spatial computing:

  • 6 Degrees of Freedom (6DoF)
  • Inside-out tracking
  • Spatial mapping and meshing
  • World reconstruction
  • Persistent content placement
  • Multiple environment support

Eye Tracking

Enhanced eye tracking system:

  • 4 eye-tracking cameras (2 per eye, vs 1 per eye on ML1)
  • Improved image quality
  • Minimized render errors
  • Enables segmented dimming
  • Foveated rendering support
  • Reduced eye strain

Input Methods

Multimodal input support:

  • Magic Leap Controller: 6DoF with IR LED and IMU tracking
  • Hand tracking and gesture recognition
  • Eye tracking for selection
  • Voice commands
  • Controller works without direct line of sight

Battery

  • External Compute Pack battery
  • Up to 3.5 hours continuous use
  • Up to 7 hours sleep mode
  • USB-C charging

Connectivity

  • Wi-Fi 6E (802.11ax)
  • Bluetooth 5.0
  • USB-C
  • 4K video output support

Enterprise Features

Designed for professional applications:

  • Healthcare: Surgical planning, medical imaging, training
  • Manufacturing: Assembly guidance, quality inspection
  • Design: 3D visualization, CAD review
  • Defense: Training, situational awareness
  • Enterprise-grade security
  • Remote collaboration tools
  • Fleet management

Editions

Three pricing tiers:

  • Base: $3,299 USD
  • Developer Pro: $4,099 USD
  • Enterprise: $4,999 USD

Technical Specifications

Specification Details
Display LCOS (2 panels)
Resolution 1440x1760 per eye
Refresh Rate 120 Hz
Field of View 70° diagonal
Processor AMD Zen 2 quad-core (7nm)
RAM 16 GB
Storage 256 GB
Eye Tracking Yes (4 cameras)
Hand Tracking Yes
Headset Weight 260g
Battery Up to 3.5 hours
Price Starting $3,299

Reception

Praise:

  • 70° FOV nearly doubles original
  • Dynamic Dimming innovative and effective
  • Significantly lighter headset (260g)
  • Enhanced eye tracking (4 cameras)
  • 120 Hz refresh rate smooth
  • Enterprise features well-designed
  • AMD Zen 2 processor powerful
  • 16GB RAM handles demanding apps
  • Improved display clarity

Criticism:

  • $3,299+ price limits accessibility
  • Enterprise-only focus
  • Still requires external Compute Pack
  • Not consumer-available
  • Learning curve for enterprise deployment
  • Competition from HoloLens 2[3]

[4]

See Also

References