EyeCase - Vision Care & Blue Light Reviews

FANNYGO 3 Pack Kids Blue Light Glasses Review 2024

By haunh··5 min read·
3.9
FANNYGO 3 Pack kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses for girls boys Computer Blue Light Blocking Glasses For Age 3-9 (Light blue + Light purple + Light pink)

FANNYGO 3 Pack kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses for girls boys Computer Blue Light Blocking Glasses For Age 3-9 (Light blue + Light purple + Light pink)

FANNYGO

  • 1,Color:3
  • 2,Quantity :3
  • 3,Applicable crowd: girls boys
  • 4,Applicable age:Kids 3-9

Quick Verdict

Pros

  • Three-color pack gives kids ownership and reduces squabbling over the same pair
  • TR90 frame is genuinely flexible — survived being sat on and twisted without cracking
  • Lightweight enough that my 5-year-old tester wore them voluntarily for two hours straight
  • Minimal color distortion — she could still see accurate screen colors during a video call
  • Elastic temple fit means no pinching on smaller faces

Cons

  • No stated blue light filter percentage — hard to know exactly how much protection your child is getting
  • Frame feels slightly plasticky and thin compared to mid-range competitors
  • One pair arrived with a slightly misaligned hinge — manageable but noticeable
  • Lens clarity isn't quite as sharp as dedicated optical-grade kids glasses

Quick Verdict

After two weeks of real-world testing with a 5-year-old, the FANNYGO kids blue light blocking glasses 3-pack holds up well enough for light daily screen use — online classes, tablet time, video calls with grandparents. The TR90 frames are genuinely flexible, the weight is barely noticeable on small faces, and three color options mean fewer sibling disputes. That said, the lack of a stated blue light filter percentage and a slightly plasticky feel keep these from being a top-tier recommendation. I'd call them a solid budget buy for casual use, but parents expecting clinical-grade protection may want to look elsewhere. Score: 3.9/5

What Is the FANNYGO Kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses?

The FANNYGO 3-pack is exactly what it sounds like: three pairs of non-prescription blue light blocking glasses aimed at children aged roughly 3 to 9. Each pack includes one light blue, one light purple, and one light pink pair — color options that lean soft rather than neon, which I appreciated when I unpacked them on a rainy Saturday morning. The frames use TR90, a bendable nylon composite commonly found in sports eyewear, and the temples are described as elastic to reduce slipping on smaller heads.

FANNYGO 3 Pack kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses for girls boys Computer Blue Light Blocking Glasses For Age 3-9 (Light blue + Light purple + Light pink)

Here's the catch that caught me off guard: the product listing doesn't state a specific blue light filtering percentage. That omission matters. Blue light glasses can block anywhere from 10% to 99% of high-energy visible (HEV) light depending on the lens coating and material. Without a number, you're essentially taking the manufacturer's word that the glasses do what they claim. I reached out to the brand's customer service on this point — no response after three days, which isn't a great sign.

Key Features

  • Three pairs per pack: light blue, light purple, light pink
  • TR90 bendable frame — flexes without cracking
  • Lightweight construction — barely registers on a child's face
  • Lens dimensions: 41mm height × 124mm width; temples 127mm
  • Elastic temple arms designed to reduce slipping
  • Suitable for ages 3-9 (though fit varies by head size)
  • Minimal color distortion for screen use
  • No stated blue light filter percentage — a notable omission

Hands-On Review

My niece, age 5, became the official test subject for this review. I handed her the light pink pair first — she immediately loved the color and put them on without being asked, which is honestly the first hurdle any kids' glasses need to clear. She wore them through a 45-minute YouTube Kids session on an iPad, a video call with her dad, and half an hour of a kids' puzzle game. Total screen time: roughly 90 minutes across the afternoon.

FANNYGO 3 Pack kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses for girls boys Computer Blue Light Blocking Glasses For Age 3-9 (Light blue + Light purple + Light pink)

What I noticed by hour two: she stopped touching the temples. That's a good sign. Some kids' glasses fit so tightly or feel so foreign that children constantly adjust them. The FANNYGO frames sat comfortably enough that she basically forgot about them — which is exactly what you want when your goal is uninterrupted screen time protection rather than a child constantly tugging at their face.

The TR90 flexibility test was less scientific but equally telling. On day three, I accidentally left the glasses on the couch. My nephew, age 7, sat down. The frames bent, twisted, and took his full weight for a solid three seconds before I noticed. No cracks, no warping, no misalignment. The hinges flexed and popped back into shape. That's not to say I'd recommend treating them this way, but for active kids who aren't always gentle, it's reassuring.

FANNYGO 3 Pack kids Blue Light Blocking Glasses for girls boys Computer Blue Light Blocking Glasses For Age 3-9 (Light blue + Light purple + Light pink)

Where things get subjective: lens clarity. Compared to a pair of $40 Wiley X kids' glasses I had on hand for reference, the FANNYGO lenses felt slightly softer — like looking through a less polished window. Colors were still accurate enough for tablet use, and my niece didn't complain about visual distortion, but if your child does a lot of detailed digital art or reading, this difference might matter. I also noticed one of the three pairs arrived with a slightly loose hinge. It hasn't affected functionality yet, but it was the kind of quality control issue you hope doesn't spread to the other two pairs over time.

Who Should Buy It?

Get these if: you have two or three kids who need glasses for screen time, your child tends to lose or break accessories, you're looking for a casual protective layer during moderate daily tablet use, or you want the convenience of a backup pair immediately on hand. The 3-pack is genuinely convenient for families.

Skip these if: your child uses screens for more than 4 hours daily with demanding visual tasks (digital art, extended reading, homework on a laptop). If you're paying for structured online tutoring sessions where visual clarity matters, a higher-quality pair with a stated filter percentage is worth the investment. Also skip if your child already wears prescription glasses — these won't fit over them and aren't designed as an overlay.

What surprised me was the color appeal factor. I expected my niece to treat these like medicine — something she'd tolerate for screen time. Instead, she asked to keep the pink pair in her school bag. That kind of voluntary adoption is rare for kids' accessories and worth acknowledging.

Alternatives Worth Considering

Osprey Kids Blue Light Glasses — if you want a single, higher-quality pair with a stated 50% blue light filter percentage. The frames are slightly more durable, and the lens coating is more consistent. Pricier per pair, but better for heavy daily use.

LOOYE 3-Pack Kids Blue Light Glasses — a comparable budget alternative with similar TR90 construction and 3-pack color variety. The key difference is that LOOYE explicitly states their filter percentage (50%), which FANNYGO does not. If verification matters to you, this is the safer bet.

Invictus Blue Light Kids Glasses — if you're willing to spend more for optical-grade polycarbonate lenses and a more robust frame warranty. These are closer to real eyewear in build quality, making them better for kids who need consistent, long-term screen protection.

FAQ

They're marketed for children ages 3-9. The lens dimensions (41mm height × 124mm width) and 127mm temples are scaled for smaller faces. Whether they actually fit a 9-year-old depends on the child's head size — some may find them snug by upper age end.

Final Verdict

The FANNYGO kids blue light blocking glasses aren't going to win awards for optical engineering, but they're a practical, affordable solution for families navigating screen time with young children. The 3-pack value is genuine, the TR90 frames survive real-world kid handling, and the weight is light enough that kids actually keep them on. My main hesitation remains the missing filter percentage — without a number, you're trusting marketing language over measurable specs. For casual tablet and TV use, that's probably fine. For intensive daily screen sessions, I'd want more data before buying. Overall: a decent buy at the right price, but not a definitive recommendation for every family.