Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
CREAL is an AR display technology company based in Ecublens, Switzerland, near the EPFL Innovation Park. Its core focus is “AR Light Field Display.” It is not creative software for graphic designers, but an underlying display solution for AR glasses, XR displays, and vision-care scenarios. The official website emphasizes that many current AR displays still project 2D images at a fixed focal distance, which can create visual conflicts and affect close-range interaction. CREAL aims to use true 3D optical depth to make digital content overlay the real world more naturally.
Its key selling points are light field display, true image depth, prescription compatibility, and transparent lens capability. The material also highlights C·Bast’s proprietary FLCoS microdisplay: it supports ultra-high frame rates at the 8kHz level and microsecond-level frame durations, helping reduce motion blur and color breakup during AR head movement. At the same time, it uses Time-Sequential Pixel Replication to improve pixel efficiency and claims compatibility with waveguide display architectures. The ultimate goal is an AR glasses display engine with a smaller form factor, wider field of view, and higher perceived resolution.
The official website does not disclose pricing, purchasing methods, licensing models, or terms for mass-production partnerships. It only mentions the proprietary FLCoS microdisplay and patented Pixel Replication system, so it appears more like a B2B technology collaboration or component-level solution than an off-the-shelf product. In terms of collaboration, CREAL emphasizes that its team has backgrounds at Intel smart glasses, Magic Leap, CERN, EPFL, and other organizations, and that it is supported by investors and advisors. However, it does not provide information on software collaboration, asset libraries, or design resource libraries.
Its strengths lie in addressing key experience bottlenecks in mainstream AR adoption: focal conflict, eye fatigue, dizziness, motion blur, display-engine size, and field-of-view limitations. It also takes prescription lenses and transparent lenses into account, making it closer to glasses-form end devices. The downside is that the public information is mainly technical narrative and vision, with few verifiable mass-production specifications, customer cases, pricing details, or delivery timelines. It is suitable for AR glasses manufacturers, optical module companies, XR hardware teams, and medical/industrial visualization solution providers to evaluate, but not for ordinary design creators to adopt directly.
The material does not provide information on mainland China access, payment, or local agents, so its accessibility status can only be considered unknown. For business cooperation, communication would most likely need to go through email or international B2B channels. Alternative areas to watch include Magic Leap, the HoloLens ecosystem, waveguide manufacturers, and microdisplay solution providers such as μLED, LCoS, and FLCoS suppliers.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on creal.com official site.
creal.com is an Switzerland Hardware & IoT provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach creal.com directly.