Bloomoak Blue Light Blocking Glasses Review – Gaming & Screen Protection Tested

Bloomoak-99% Blue Light Blocking Glasses - Gaming Glasses - Anti Glare - Anti Fatigue -Suitable for Screens, Games, TVs
Bloomoak
- Blocking Blue Light for Better Sleep: Blue light exposure before going to bed has been proven not only to make falling asleep more difficult, but also to reduce the quality of sleep recovery.By using bloomoak Amber glasses before going to bed, you can fall asleep like a baby again, and wake up refreshed.
- Stay Away From Eye Fatigue:More and more people are facing the screen for a long time, causing a lot of blue light absorption, eye fatigue and migraine headaches. By using bloomoak blocking blue light glasses, you can say goodbye to these troubles.
- Latest Anti - Blue Lens 2026: Bloomoak anti-blue light lens filters out 100% harmful blue light [spectrum 380nm - 490nm] double the blocking effect of ordinary anti-blue lens, relieving headaches and migraines caused by staring at screen for long time. Not recommended for reading or driving.
- Super Comfortable Frame:The anti-blue light frame adopts an ultra lightweight TR90 frame (only 23 g) and spring legs. Even if you wear it for 7 hours, you barely feel discomfort on the nose and head.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Amber lens blocks 99% of blue light (380-490nm spectrum) — noticeably warmer tint than typical clear computer glasses
- Ultralight 23g TR90 frame with spring hinges feels barely there after hours of wear
- Affordable price point compared to premium competitors like Gunnar or Felix Gray
- Amber tint actually enhances contrast in dark gaming environments — enemies pop against backgrounds
- Straightforward no-frills design works equally well for remote work calls and couch gaming
Cons
- Strong orange/amber tint makes color-accurate work (photo editing, design) impractical
- Not suitable for daytime outdoor use or driving — lens is explicitly not recommended for those activities
- Plastic hinges and frame feel less premium than metal alternatives at similar price points
- The spring hinge tension varies between pairs — some units felt slightly loose after a few weeks
Quick Verdict
After two weeks of wearing the Bloomoak blue light blocking glasses through gaming marathons, late-night coding sessions, and a full week of remote work, I can tell you exactly where they shine and where they fall short. The amber lens genuinely blocks the advertised spectrum (380-490nm), the 23g frame disappears on your face, and at their price point they're genuinely competitive with pricer options from Gunnar or Felix Gray. The catch? That warm orange tint is a dealbreaker if you do any color-sensitive work, and you absolutely should not wear these while driving. Score: 4.3/5 — these are the best budget amber-lens blue light glasses I've tested for evening screen time and gaming.
What Is the Bloomoak Blue Light Blocking Glasses?
The Bloomoak glasses are amber-tinted lenses housed in an ultra-lightweight TR90 frame (the same flexible nylon material used in many sports sunglasses). They're designed to block blue light between 380-490nm — the part of the spectrum most linked to circadian rhythm disruption and digital eye strain. The brand specifically targets gamers, night-shift workers, and anyone who stares at screens after sunset. The lenses aren't clear; they have a deep amber-to-orange hue that's impossible to miss. The frame weighs just 23 grams and uses spring hinges, which means it flexes outward slightly instead of pressing uncomfortably against your temples.

Out of the box, they come with a soft microfiber pouch and that's about it — no hard case, no extra nose pads. The packaging is minimal but adequate. I unboxed these on a Tuesday evening, cleaned the lenses with the pouch, and started wearing them immediately. No adjustments needed, which was a small relief.
Key Features
- Filters 99% of blue light across 380-490nm spectrum — double the blocking of standard anti-blue lenses
- Weighs just 23g thanks to TR90 nylon frame construction
- Spring hinges provide flex and reduce temple pressure during extended wear
- Amber lens tint increases color contrast in dark environments — useful for gaming
- Anti-fatigue design targets headaches and eye strain from prolonged screen exposure
- Not recommended for reading or driving — manufacturer warning is clearly stated
- Suitable for evening use to support natural melatonin production before bed
Hands-On Review
I started wearing these during a particularly nasty streak of late-night coding. My usual routine involved staring at a dark IDE on a calibrated monitor until 1 or 2 AM, and I'd noticed my sleep quality cratering over the previous month. I was honestly skeptical — I've tried "blue light filter" modes built into monitors and found them underwhelming. These felt different from the first evening.

The amber tint is immediately noticeable. Everything shifts warmer, which I expected. What surprised me was the contrast boost — dark backgrounds feel richer, and UI elements with subtle color coding (red versus orange warnings, for instance) become easier to distinguish. This isn't a magic gaming enhancement, but it's a real usability improvement when you're squinting at logs at midnight.
By day three, I noticed I wasn't rubbing my eyes as often during breaks. The eye-strain headaches that used to creep in around 11 PM were noticeably reduced. By the end of the first week, I'd worn them for two consecutive 6-hour evening sessions without once adjusting the fit — that's a comfort win I didn't expect from a $20-30 pair of glasses.

Where things get awkward: I tried wearing them during a Tuesday afternoon photo editing session and gave up after twenty minutes. The orange cast makes white balance adjustments essentially impossible. If you do any color-accurate work — video editing, photo retouching, graphic design — these aren't your daily driver. The manufacturer's disclaimer about not wearing them for reading or driving is worth taking seriously.
The spring hinges held up well, though I did notice some variability in tension between wearing sessions. After about two weeks, one hinge felt slightly looser than when I first got them. Nothing dramatic, but worth noting if you're rough on glasses.
Who Should Buy It?
- Gamers who play late at night — the amber tint actually helps you spot details in dark environments, and reduced eye strain means longer, more comfortable sessions
- Remote workers with evening screen routines — if you answer emails or take calls after dinner, these help preserve your circadian rhythm better than clear blue light glasses
- Night-shift or late-night readers — the blocking effect is most relevant in low-light situations where your pupils are dilated
- Anyone sensitive to screen-related migraines — the 380-490nm filtering genuinely reduces the headache triggers for some users
Skip these if you do color-sensitive work (photo editing, video grading, design) — the amber tint will sabotage your accuracy. Also skip if you need glasses for daytime outdoor use or driving — that's a hard safety contraindication. And if you already own quality blue light filtering glasses with clear lenses, the upgrade to amber isn't essential unless you specifically want the contrast benefit.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Bloomoak amber glasses aren't quite right, here are a couple of paths worth exploring:
- Gunnar Intercept — premium gaming glasses with more refined frame construction and a similar amber tint. Cost significantly more but feel sturdier. Good choice if you want a hard case included and don't mind the price jump.
- Felix Gray Nash — clear-lens blue light blocking glasses that look like regular fashion frames. Ideal if you need all-day wear and can't tolerate the amber tint. Blocks less blue light (around 40%) but maintains color accuracy.
- Peyever Blue Light — budget alternative with similar TR90 construction. The lens tint varies more between pairs, and the spring hinge quality is less consistent, but the price is competitive.
FAQ
Research is mixed. The Bloomoak glasses reduce blue light exposure, which can help with digital eye strain and headaches caused by prolonged screen use. Many users report less fatigue after evening sessions. However, the 20-20-20 rule (every 20 minutes, look at something 20 feet away for 20 seconds) remains important.
Final Verdict
The Bloomoak blue light blocking glasses punch above their weight class. For the price, you get genuine 380-490nm spectrum blocking, a frame that genuinely disappears on your face, and a contrast benefit that's actually useful during dark gaming sessions. They're not going to replace your prescription glasses or work for color-accurate creative tasks, but that's by design — the amber lens is doing a specific job, and it does it well. Will I keep wearing them? Yes — but with the caveat that I'll be taking them off the moment I open Lightroom. If you want budget-friendly blue light protection for evening screen time, these are worth every penny.