Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple dips its toe into VR with the $30 View-Master headset

Add as a preferred source on Google

Holiday Gift Guide Banner
Image used with permission by copyright holder

This product was featured in our Holiday Gift Guide! Check it out to find gift inspiration for everyone in your life.

Recommended Videos

Last year, Mattel rebooted the classic View-Master toy as an affordable virtual reality headset, with support for Google Cardboard apps and compatibility with a wide range of different smartphones. Now, while Apple is allegedly hard at work on its own Virtual Reality ideas, the Cupertino company is selling the revamped View-Master headset on its website.

First spotted by Reddit user dbx001, the “View-Master Virtual Reality Starter Pack” is not only available to ship to your home address, but those interested can also pick it up at the store. When I personally tried to pick one up at a nearby Apple Store location, each store listed the item as “Available in about a week.” That means the View-Master may be making its way to Apple’s retail locations too, in addition to just the website.

Within the past few weeks, Apple has certainly demonstrated its interest in VR, albeit secretly, by bringing together a “large team of experts” to contrive both virtual and augmented reality projects from the privacy of its own offices. In fact, during a recent earnings call, Apple CEO Time Cook expressed his thoughts on Virtual Reality, declaring the technology “cool” and that it has some “interesting applications.”

While it might take some time before we see an iVR (Apple VR?) headset in the flesh, in the meantime you can enjoy a retro throwback, emended for the future for only $30 from Apple’s website.

To be clear, though, Mattel and its View-Master share no partnership affiliation with Apple. The View-Master works with a variety of smartphones aside from the iPhone. This is just a way for the company to make a few bucks off someone else’s product in order to appear competent against the likes of Google’s Cardboard or Samsung’s Gear VR. Nonetheless, it’s probably working, because I’ll be ordering mine just as soon as I finish writing this sentence.

Gabe Carey
A freelancer for Digital Trends, Gabe Carey has been covering the intersection of video games and technology since he was 16…
AI is entering the Skynet debate moment in the social media hype circles
AI might end the world - but first, it’ll trend on social media
Representative Image

A growing wave of online voices warning about the dangers of artificial intelligence—often dubbed “AI doom influencers” - is reshaping how the public and policymakers view the technology. According to a report by The Washington Post, these influencers, including researchers, tech leaders, and content creators, are increasingly highlighting worst-case scenarios, from mass job loss to existential risks posed by advanced AI systems.

While critics argue that some of this messaging borders on alarmism, the conversation is no longer confined to speculation. Real-world developments in AI are beginning to mirror some of the concerns being raised, blurring the line between hype and legitimate risk.

Read more
You won’t believe it, but Motorola actually makes a terrific head-turner of a laptop
Motorola’s Moto Book 60 Pro is surprisingly stylish, and the pricing makes it even better
Moto Book 60 Pro in PANTONE Bronze Green

Motorola is not the name I expect to see on a genuinely good laptop. A stylish phone? Sure. A foldable with some personality? Absolutely. But a thin-and-light notebook that actually feels well judged on both design and value was a genuine surprise. And yet, the Moto Book 60 Pro is one of the more quietly impressive laptops in its segment.

With the broader laptop market being in a mess, Motorola's laptops feel refreshing. It is capable, attractive, and still approachable at a time when pricing elsewhere has become increasingly rough.

Read more
Zoom will now check if you are a human or an AI imposter during video meetings
Biometric badges, iris scans, and AI bouncers: welcome to the future of your Monday morning standup.
Zoom face scan technology.

Zoom video calls just got a new kind of awkward small feature. The platform will now ask you whether you’re human. It has partnered with World, Sam Altman’s iris-scanning identity company (previously known as Worldcoin), to add real-time human verification inside meetings. 

The feature, launched on April 17, 2026, is a part of World’s ID 4.0 rollout. It lets hosts confirm that every face on the call belongs to a real person, not an AI-generated imposter. 

Read more