EyeCase - Vision Care & Blue Light Reviews

ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses Review: Honest Verdict

By haunh··5 min read·
4.2
ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses, Anti Eyestrain Lens Lightweight Frame Eyeglasses, Black, Men/Women

ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses, Anti Eyestrain Lens Lightweight Frame Eyeglasses, Black, Men/Women

ANRRI

  • REDUCE EYESTRAIN: Enjoy your digital time, NO worry about eye fatigue, blurred vision and headache
  • ANTI BLUE LIGHT: Cut 90% of the blue light. Relieving eye fatigue, dry and vision falling
  • BETTER SLEEP: Reduce eye strain and headache, so you can enjoy a restful deeper sleep
  • MATERIAL Frame: TR90 ; Lens: Polycarbonate (non-magnification)

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Cuts approximately 90% of blue light — noticeable reduction in eye fatigue during long screen sessions
  • Ultralight TR90 frame feels barely there, even after 8+ hours of wear
  • Lifetime warranty removes purchase anxiety and speaks to build quality confidence
  • Unisex design works equally well for men and women without looking overly techy
  • Budget-friendly price point makes them accessible for first-time blue light glass buyers
  • No magnification — safe for everyday computer use without prescription concerns

Cons

  • Clarity takes a slight hit — yellow tint is noticeable, especially when colour accuracy matters
  • Frame sits slightly loose on smaller faces; expect frequent nudge-ups
  • No case included — scratch risk if you toss them in a bag
  • Adjustable nose pads absent; long-term comfort on individual face shapes is a gamble

Quick Verdict

If you've been eyeing ANRRI blue light blocking glasses as a budget entry point into digital eye strain protection, you're looking at the right product — with realistic caveats. Two weeks of daily wear confirmed what the specs promise: genuine blue light filtration, a featherlight TR90 frame, and a no-nonsense warranty. What surprised me was how quickly I stopped noticing them on my face. The trade-off is a persistent yellow tint and a looser fit that you'll either love or constantly adjust. At this price point, they're the best value proposition in non-prescription blue light eyewear I've tested. Rating: 4.2/5

What Is the ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses?

The ANRRI blue light blocking glasses are a pair of non-prescription, flat-lens glasses designed to filter out approximately 90% of high-energy visible (HEV) blue light emitted from screens. They're marketed at anyone logging serious screen hours — remote workers, developers, gamers, content creators, and anyone who notices their eyes feeling gritty after a long day at the monitor.

ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses, Anti Eyestrain Lens Lightweight Frame Eyeglasses, Black, Men/Women

What sets them apart from budget competitors isn't a single flashy feature — it's the combination of TR90 frame material (the same polymer used in some sports eyewear), polycarbonate lenses, and a lifetime warranty at a price that won't make you flinch. The glasses arrive in a simple cardboard sleeve with a microfiber pouch. No fancy case, no adjustment kit — just the glasses and a cleaning cloth wrapped in plastic. I appreciated the reduced waste on unboxing day.

Key Features

  • Approximately 90% blue light filtration across the 380-450nm spectrum
  • TR90 nylon composite frame — 20% lighter than standard plastics
  • Polycarbonate lenses — impact-resistant and shatter-safe
  • Non-magnification, zero prescription required
  • Unisex design fitting most face shapes and sizes
  • Lifetime warranty covering manufacturing defects
  • Available in multiple frame sizes including oversized options

Hands-On Review

I unboxed these on a Wednesday afternoon, fully expecting to return them within the 30-day window. My scepticism was rooted in past experiences with cheap blue light glasses — uncomfortable pressure points, lenses that were either crystal clear (read: doing nothing) or so tinted they made my office look like a submarine. The ANRRI glasses didn't immediately wow me in the unboxing. They looked... fine. Ordinary, even. That changed the first time I wore them through a six-hour coding sprint.

ANRRI Blue Light Blocking Glasses, Anti Eyestrain Lens Lightweight Frame Eyeglasses, Black, Men/Women

By hour three, I realised I hadn't instinctively removed them once. The TR90 frame genuinely disappears on your face. I'm not exaggerating when I say I forgot I was wearing them twice — once when I reached up to push my real glasses back on (that's a different problem) and once when I walked into a hardware store after work and the staff member had to point out I still had them on. That's the comfort bar these glasses clear.

What about the actual blue light filtering? I noticed the difference most acutely in the evening. Two hours before bed with my usual screen habits — YouTube, emails, a bit of light gaming — I would normally feel that wired, can't-shut-my-brain-off sensation. Wearing the ANRRI glasses, the wind-down felt more gradual. Not dramatic, not a cure for insomnia, but a perceptible softening of that artificial alertness. After the first week, I started putting them on automatically around 7 PM without thinking about it.

The yellow tint is real and it's worth addressing directly. Under warm indoor lighting, you adapt to it within minutes. Under cool white LEDs or fluorescent office lighting, it's more pronounced and colours — particularly whites — look noticeably warmer. For photo editing or any colour-critical work, you'll want to remove them. I ran into this myself when trying to grade some video footage at 10 PM. The tint masked yellows I thought were fine but weren't. I switched back to my regular glasses for that task and put the ANRRIs back on for the rest of the session.

Who Should Buy It?

Remote workers and office employees logging 6+ hours daily on screens will see the most benefit. The comfort level supports all-day wear without the temple-pressure headaches cheaper glasses often cause by hour four.

Gamers playing extended sessions — particularly those who game in the evening — will appreciate both the eye strain reduction and the potential sleep quality improvement from reduced pre-bed blue exposure.

Students doing heavy coursework on laptops and tablets will find the budget price point especially attractive. No sense spending £150 on designer blue light glasses when you're probably going to lose them in a backpack anyway.

Digital artists and content creators should think carefully. If colour accuracy is part of your workflow, these aren't daily drivers. Consider them evening-only glasses or look for lower tint alternatives.

Skip these if you have a narrow or very small face — the standard width sits loose and you'll spend more time pushing them back up than actually working. Also skip if you need prescription lenses; these are purely non-magnification.

Alternatives Worth Considering

MVMT Computer Glasses — if you're willing to spend roughly 3x the price for a more fashion-forward titanium or acetate frame and slightly more refined lens coating. The MVMT glasses look more like everyday eyewear and less like "gaming glasses." The filtration performance is comparable, so the premium is purely aesthetic and brand-driven.

Gamma Ray Optics Blue Light Glasses — a direct competitor at a similar price point with a slightly wider frame selection and better nose pad adjustability. If the ANRRI fit doesn't work for your face shape, Gamma Ray is worth a try. The warranty terms are comparable too.

Felix Gray Parson Glasses — a mid-range option (about 2x ANRRI pricing) with proprietary lens coating that claims better optical clarity and reduced tint. Good if you work in colour-critical environments but still want blue light protection during the day.

FAQ

Yes — they filter approximately 90% of blue light in the 380-450nm range. During my two-week test, I noticed measurably less eye fatigue after 6+ hour screen sessions compared to wearing no glasses. The effect is real, though not magical.

Final Verdict

The ANRRI blue light blocking glasses punch well above their weight for the price. Genuine 90% blue light filtration, a TR90 frame that genuinely earns the "featherlight" marketing, and a lifetime warranty that removes risk from the purchase. Two weeks of real-world use — including a genuinely demanding coding week and several late-night editing sessions — convinced me these belong on the shortlist for anyone buying blue light glasses on a budget.

The yellow tint is the honest trade-off at this price tier, and it's one you can work around with habit. If absolute colour accuracy during screen work is non-negotiable for you, factor that into your decision. For everyone else — remote workers, students, evening screen surfers — the ANRRI glasses deliver the core promise without demanding a premium.

Would I buy them again? Yes. With the caveat that I'll probably buy two pairs — one for my desk and one for my travel bag — because losing them would genuinely annoy me more than the glasses cost.