---
product_id: 44147622
title: "Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition)"
brand: "vufine"
price: "Rp69682"
currency: IDR
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.id/products/44147622-vufine-wearable-display-standard-2016-kickstarter-edition
store_origin: ID
region: Indonesia
---

# Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition)

**Brand:** vufine
**Price:** Rp69682
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) by vufine
- **How much does it cost?** Rp69682 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Currently out of stock
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.id](https://www.desertcart.id/products/44147622-vufine-wearable-display-standard-2016-kickstarter-edition)

## Best For

- vufine enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted vufine brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Description

2016 Kickstarter Edition: Vufine is a high definition, wearable display that allows you to enjoy the functionality of your current technology in a handsfree environment. Vufine is great for piloting drones, operating remote cameras, playing location-based games and dozens of other uses. Neither virtual reality nor augmented reality, Vufine is a new approach to wearables that focuses on the primary component of both devices: the display. We believe your technology is smart enough, you simply need new ways to experience it. Vufine attaches to glasses via magnetic docking station and connects with an HDMI cable to avoid latency issues and preserve battery life. Powered by an internal battery, Vufine lasts for approx. 90 minutes and is capable of charging while in use for extended activity. The Vufine Standard model does not offer display modes or left eye compatibility. The Vufine Standard is compatible with all Vufine and Vufine+ accessories. The difference from the current Vufine+ model: No Docking Station Plus, No display modes, and limited 720p compatibility.

## Images

![Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71Sdx6JkdxL.jpg)
![Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/612oiqMueFL.jpg)
![Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61DSvXavbTL.jpg)
![Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61wHtNH3sQL.jpg)
![Vufine Wearable Display (Standard - 2016 Kickstarter Edition) - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71EYpDirfvL.jpg)

## Questions & Answers

**Q: Will it pick up race band frequencies for FPV racing?**
A: Vufine is a wired display and does not have any wireless capability. You will need an external receiver with HDMI output to view FPV racing video stream on Vufine.

**Q: Can this be used on the left eye**
A: My kickstarter edition was only built for the right eye, as someone who is left eye dominant this setup did not work for me. Perhaps a later revision has solved this, but don't count on it.

**Q: Is this compatible with dji drones like the mavic pro?**
A: It works with my DJI Fantom III Pro. I added the module from DJI that has HDMI output. It works fine

**Q: What does the (Standard) mean? and how is it different with other Vufine sold here at Amazon?**
A: The current model, Vufine+ offers the following additional features.
1) Three display modes each optimized display size for, smartphone portrait, tablet (4:3), and widescreen.
2) New Docking Station Plus with a ball joint in addition to the standard docking station.
3) Wider compatibility with newer devices. (Note Vufine+ is still 720p, does not support 1080p)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐ 1.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Vufine but is the View really Fine?
  

*by T***E on Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2017*

Holy cow man! Just read this even if you said to yourself you are going to buy this cause it looks cool and I don't care what anyone else says.Okay so now that I've got that out of the way, I bought this item with the same exact idea. I didn't care what anyone else thought of it. I wanted one now. Well When it arrived it was well packaged and everything was still in the box. It has:1 pair of glasses1 usb micro to usb cord for charging1 mini hdmi to hdmi cord (this is so people don't buy one of these with the order thinking they need to get one.)1 vufine wearable display1 thing to attach the display to the glasses1 metal piece to attach the display if you are wearing thin framed glasses1 set of instructions.It was an average build quality. It was made of plastic but didn't feel cheap. The instructions were half way decent. I figured out what everything was and how to use them. There is one button on the thing but you had to learn how to use them. One fast press and it turns on. One press and  hold  to turn off. If you press and hold it while it is off, it remains off. If you just click it when it's on nothing happens.So I plugged them in to charge. I waited 20 minutes and then attached them to my windows pc and then turned them on. I was like, I'm going to play my computer and bring up stats at the same time. And then when they turned on, I was underwhelmed by how small the display was inside. The screen looked so small and it felt like it was two feet away. It felt like they tried to go half way in making it a full cover your entire eye and make it an augmented reality device.  But since you couldn't see threw it, it just kept like freaking me out. I was going to use this for text mostly so it didn't matter to me, just looking down at it from time to time is all I would be doing so the thing making it look two feet away was okay for me until I tried to read something. I brought up some text on a browser and then, wow.... (in a bad way).  The center was clear but the edges were all fuzzy. It also had this weird glare you get when you up the whiteness levels on your screen and it was all around the edges. This made it impossible to read anything on the edges of the screen. Even if you tried to blow everything up, if it wasn't the proper dimensions, the Vufine wouldn't compensate and just leave you with a black screen with pixels randomly turning gray. (More on this later)I did try to play a game on my full screen and watch a video on the Vufine. It was again disappointing because the details were all fuzzy and glare made it so I had to concentrate instead of a quick look at the Vufine and then back up at my screen. I was like, my dual screen setup is better than this. I had to move my eyes anyways to look at it so I might as well look at something that  doesn't have a horrible picture.Then it happened, the reason I am returning the Vufine. 30 minutes had passed since I turned it on. I was on the blue windows background because I couldn't take watching a video on the Vuefine any more.I then saw it change out of the corner of my eye. The whole picture suddenly became undersaturated. That bold dark blue now looked like someone had mixed together blue paint and white paint in a kindergarten art class. They were both there but not there. I believe this is called undersaturation.So I unplugged the mini hdmi cord and plugged it back in. Then everything went back to normal. Then a few minutes after that I went to adjust the screen horizontally to get it to move right in front of my eye. As I did so, there were stutters of red, green and blue stripes going down my screen. Of course it stopped when I finished moving the thing but that was scary in itself. When I move a monitor with a cable I my monitor doesn't have random lines going up and down it unless it is broken.So I continued using it and again the white light came threw my screen again making the picture undersaturated once again. Again I unplugged the mini hdmi from the device and plugged it back in. Then that's where I had enough, the screen was back in proper color but it was zoomed in on a different part of my windows background. Honestly that was probably the best color I've had it the entire time. It was crisp and clear but it was literally a small, probably 5% of the screen (I couldn't tell it was so zoomed in). So again unplug and replug and then the undersaturation was there again. It then corrected itself back to normal colors.At this point after about maybe at most an hour and 30 minutes of use I was done with it after it discoloring several times for no reason and the stripes down the screen. I knew it was probably going to get worse the more I used it and I was planning on using it alot.For fun before I packed it up I had originally wanted it to be used for a mini computer with a raspberry pi. I literally ordered it for that one reason alone. When I plugged it in, there was nothing. That was the final nail on the coffin. I would stand oversaturation and the inability to read the items on the side, but when it couldn't just adjust the image to 720p from 1080p by itself. All that happened was the screen turned bIack, then white dots came up and then gray dots started forming in clusters slowly eating up the screen. I just couldn't take it. I know I could downsize the pi to produce a 720p picture but that wasn't the point. The point is is that every other screen I have tried or tested would display anything even if it wasn't the right size for the monitor. It would cut everything else it couldn't display but it would display something so you could possibly change the display settings on it.  I had tested it earlier on my windows machine and tried to play with the display settings to see if I could get the text bigger when I used the internet. I set it up with every setting windows had. Only the 720p setting worked and 800x600. Everything else turned the screen black.In conclusion, the Vufine was a good idea, but it was implemented poorly. The thought of just having a display with a hdmi out you could wear is exciting. This is literally the only thing on the market with that idea. Everything else comes with a computer built in or it's wifi or bluetooth connected to your phone. But with problemed edges, the view making a screen look far away, and random spurts of undersaturation, this product should not be bought.To this day, I have only returned one thing from amazon until today because it didn't work straight out of the box. This makes item number two. I hate doing this. I would rather keep a bad product than return it because I have the "oh I get what I paid for" mentality but I paid a large amount of money for this and I swear I'd put up with all it's faults and just keep it, but when it starts to malfunction not even 2 hours out of the box, I get mad because I have to find a ups drop off point to get my money back.

### ⭐⭐⭐ 3.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Work in Progress.
  

*by D***R on Reviewed in the United States on January 9, 2018*

I wanted to give this product a fair chance, try out every feature and way of using it, and make sure I tinker with it as much as possible when something didn't work. Here are the results of my findings:In a nutshell, think of it as a wearable monitor. That's it. The resolution is fairly small, about the size of an iPhone 6 flipped sideways. The resolution is very clear and sharp, but your eye is simply incapable of fishing out tiny text on a web site when viewed through the screen, unless you zoom into that page. Likewise, you will probably want to decrease the resolution considerably.For PC use:I attempted several ways to use this. For network monitoring, I was successfully able to stick a PRTG diagram via a web page into the screen in a more or less meaningful way. Extremely zoomed in RSS feeds were also viewable. Some classic games, in particular Lucas Arts X-Wing, Mech Warrior, and Wing Commander were a bit fun to play due to the novelty factor of the eyepiece. (Still can't find a way to do multiple screen in Mech Warrior... that would have made my year.) Movies played perfectly, and subtitles were clearly visible. The sharp downside of PC (and for that matter tablet/phone use) is the utter lack of sound. The connection is HDMI, which conveys audio and video. On the PC, you will have to manually redefine audio output to get any sound out of the computer when this device is plugged in.In attempting to use it with RaspberryPI out of the box, I was not able to see the initial config text. When I connected it to my son's KANO computer kit (children's kit for RaspberryPi,) it displayed everything perfectly, with the text being clearly visible. You will need to pre-configure your Pi for optimal resolution if that's how you want to use the Vufine device.On the iPhone:For this purpose I purchased an iPhone HDMI adapter. The screen projected perfectly. All text is very sharp and visible (the dimension of the projected screen on the Vufine device is exactly the iPhone flipped sideways as I sad earlier.) The gaming is ok, but you still need to know where your thumbs are, hence the eyepiece is just an added novelty for the most part.I made an attempt to use GPS while driving, which turned out to be a bigger pain than simply mounting your phone on a dashboard. It seriously messes with your depth perception while driving, making stops more sudden. For this purpose it is simply impractical, and will definitely take a LOT to get used to.For watching videos, be advised that you will not have sound. Again, the HDMI connection assumes that the receiving device will broadcast audio. The Vufine does not have an audio output jack, hence no sound.CONS:After a while, it will start to bother your eyes. Even as I type this, I am mildly irritated by the sense of something being over my eye. Again, wearing these devices will take a lot of getting used to. For short periods of time, it can be fun, but for prolonged use it may not serve you well in it's current form.No way to have sound on iPhone when watching videos.THE VERDICT:For the time being, this is simply a novelty item. It does not serve a practical purpose out of the box. The only real potential I see as of now, is for developers. I will be using my RaspberryPI to create a smart HUD in the near future. Otherwise, it may make sense to wait for a better smart device with more integrated features and capabilities.

### ⭐⭐⭐ 3.0 out of 5 stars







  
  
    Doesn't work with a mini USB-C connection
  

*by R***R on Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2018*

The monitor works fine when connected to my computer, it also has a clear picture although it could be a little larger. The only real problem I am having is connecting it to my Smart phone, I have a Moto Force Z² and the connection port is a mini USB-C. I have yet to find an adapter or a combination of adapters to make it work with my smart phone.

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*Product available on Desertcart Indonesia*
*Store origin: ID*
*Last updated: 2026-05-13*