Huawei Plans AR/VR Glasses with Detachable Smart Ring Controller
Huawei Plans AR/VR Glasses with Detachable Smart Ring Controller
Synopsis
- Huawei patents new AR/VR glasses featuring a detachable smart ring controller.
- The ring functions through gesture recognition and magnetic docking.
- Patent CN120871434A hints at Huawei’s hybrid solution for immersive interaction.
- Offers tactile control blending physical feedback with AR/VR usability.
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Huawei is venturing deeper into immersive technology with a newly filed patent for AR/VR glasses integrated with a detachable smart ring controller, according to a report by Huawei Central. The design, filed under application number CN120871434A with the China National Intellectual Property Administration (CNIPA), signals Huawei’s intent to merge intuitive control with next-generation wearable computing.

The patent describes eyewear capable of bridging augmented reality (AR) and virtual reality (VR) experiences through a detachable smart ring strap that doubles as a controller. When removed from the glasses, users can wear the ring on their finger to perform gesture-based commands, including pointing, navigation, and interactive gaming. This flexible functionality supports AR gaming, virtual workspace collaboration, and other high-interaction environments.
When reattached to the headset, the smart ring enables basic input functions such as taps and swipes, while automatically recharging without any separate controller or cable. This approach not only simplifies user interaction but also reduces device clutter—a key challenge in the growing AR/VR ecosystem.
According to Huawei Central, Huawei’s innovation integrates magnetic components, inertial sensors, wireless modules, and touch-sensitive feedback systems to ensure accurate motion tracking and responsive haptic interaction. The modular structure includes mechanical buttons and gesture-based controls, designed to provide a comfortable, seamless user experience.
Industry observers note that this hybrid system offers a potential advantage over rivals. While Meta’s headsets rely on handheld controllers and Apple’s Vision Pro depends solely on eye and hand tracking, Huawei’s concept offers both physical feedback and intuitive gesture navigation. The detachable ring delivers a tactile sense of control without requiring users to carry separate hardware.
Although the device remains at the patent stage, the filing underscores Huawei’s expanding ambitions in the AR and VR sectors, positioning the company as a contender in shaping how future human-computer interactions will unfold. If commercialized, this innovation could redefine the way users engage with immersive environments, combining ergonomic design with cross-device functionality.
The patent, first reported by Huawei Central and Wareable, adds to Huawei’s portfolio of AR technology experiments, emphasizing its continued push toward a next-generation AR/VR ecosystem that seamlessly integrates hardware and user interaction.
Source: Huawei Central, Wareable
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About Huawei Enterprise
Huawei Enterprise AR and VR research is documented in its Virtual Reality/Augmented Reality White Paper released in 2018 by Huawei iLab. The paper outlined how near-eye display, rendering, perception, interaction, and network transmission technologies were advancing to support immersive applications.
It forecast that between 2017 and 2019, 2K-resolution head-mounted VR displays operating at 90 Hz would reach large-scale use, and that after 2020, 4K-plus monocular displays running above 120 Hz with varifocal and light-field capabilities would enter industrial deployment. On 17 June 2021, Huawei followed with its AR Insight and Application Practice White Paper, highlighting enterprise and 5G-enabled AR use cases such as remote collaboration, industrial design, and training. Together, these publications confirm Huawei’s focus on AR/VR as an enterprise infrastructure technology, emphasizing ecosystem development and integration with 5G, edge computing, and cloud rendering—not on consumer headsets.
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