China’s Xreal to power Google’s Android AI glasses as smart eyewear demand grows



Chinese augmented reality start-up Xreal has teamed up with Google on Project Aura, a venture to launch artificial intelligence glasses powered by the Android XR operating system and Gemini AI next year, in a fresh example of Chinese capabilities in research and development.

Project Aura, resembling a pair of thick sunglasses, was first announced at Google’s annual I/O developer conference in May. The device runs on Android XR, a unified platform for extended reality (XR) devices built through a partnership between Google, Qualcomm and Samsung, and comes integrated with Gemini AI.

Aura employs a dual chip design, with an Xreal X1S chip embedded inside the glasses and a Qualcomm Snapdragon Chip housed in a separate tethered puck that also holds the battery.

The glasses feature optical see-through lenses, allowing users to clearly view their real-world surroundings with a field of view of 70 degrees. Aura projects applications directly into the user’s sightline, enabling interaction via hand gestures and granting access to Google Play apps.

“With Project Aura, we’re showing how Android XR can expand to the broader ecosystem, supporting new types of XR devices,” said Shahram Izadi, vice-president and general manager at Android XR at Google.

Xreal, previously known as Nreal, was founded in 2017 by Zhejiang University alumni Xu Chi, Wu Kejian, and Xiao Bing. It has rapidly become a major player in the smart eyewear market. Xreal One was named one of Time magazine’s best inventions of 2025.
  • Related Posts

    China’s AI red-packet battle burns through US$1 billion – but will users stick around?

    In an unprecedented Chinese New Year marketing blitz, Alibaba Group Holding, Baidu, ByteDance and Tencent Holdings spent an estimated 8 billion yuan (US$1.1 billion) to turn their artificial intelligence assistants…

    Continue reading
    Chinese AI drug researcher XtalPi expects to turn first annual profit on 193% revenue jump

    Chinese artificial intelligence-powered drug researcher XtalPi Holdings said it expects to turn its first annual profit on the back of strong revenue growth, according to a corporate filing. The Shenzhen-based…

    Continue reading

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published.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