GUNNAR Clix Gaming Glasses Review – Real-World Test of These Amber Lens Blue Light Blockers

GUNNAR Gaming Glasses - Clix Gaming Goggles Amber Max Lens - Blue Light Blocking Relieve Dry Eye
Gunnar
- Square-frame hybrid of PEP polymer and stainless steel delivers strong, ergonomic wear for long gaming days
- Amber Max tint offers maximum blue light filtering and warmth for ultra-comfort in high screen exposure
- Patented GUNNAR technology reduces digital eye strain by blocking harmful blue light and 100 % UV
- G‑Shield Plus coating ensures high clarity with anti-reflective, smudge-resistant, oleophobic protectio
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Amber Max tint noticeably reduces screen harshness during long sessions
- Square hybrid frame feels sturdy yet lightweight for extended wear
- G-Shield Plus coating keeps lenses clear and smudge-resistant
- Blocks 100% UV and filters high-energy blue light
- Includes microfiber pouch, cleaning cloth, and 12-month warranty
- Official Clix design adds collectible appeal
Cons
- Amber tint shifts color accuracy — not ideal for photo/video editing
- Frame runs slightly narrow; broader faces may feel pressure on temples
- No prescription lens option limits accessibility for some users
- Premium pricing compared to generic blue light glasses
Quick Verdict
If you've been hunting for GUNNAR gaming glasses that actually cut through the blue light haze on your monitor, the Clix edition with Amber Max lens is worth a hard look. Two weeks of real-world testing — everything from late-night ranked matches to eight-hour coding shifts — convinced me these aren't just another pair of tinted frames. The amber tint genuinely softens high-energy light, the square hybrid frame holds up during long sessions, and the G-Shield Plus coating keeps the lenses clear without constant smudge-wiping. I'd score this around 4.2 out of 5 — excellent for gamers and screen workers, but with a couple of caveats worth knowing before you click buy. Recommended for anyone spending 4+ hours daily in front of screens.
What Is the GUNNAR Clix Gaming Glasses?
GUNNAR makes no secret of what they're building: glasses specifically engineered for digital eye strain. The Clix Gaming Glasses with Amber Max lens take that mission and dial it up a notch. The square-frame hybrid construction pairs a PEP polymer body with stainless steel accents — a material combo that keeps the weight down while maintaining structural rigidity. The defining feature here is the Amber Max tint: GUNNAR's darkest amber filter, designed to block the highest-energy portion of the blue light spectrum and deliver that warm, high-contrast look gamers tend to associate with better screen visibility.

Beyond the tint, GUNNAR layers in their G-Shield Plus coating — an anti-reflective, smudge-resistant, and oleophobic treatment that claims to keep the lenses clear through daily abuse. The patented technology also handles 100% UV protection, which matters more than some people realize if you're working near windows or under bright desk lamps. This is the official Clix edition, which means it ships with a collectible microfiber pouch and cleaning cloth, plus a 12-month warranty — a small but appreciated bundle that says GUNNAR is serious about longevity.
Key Features
- Square-frame hybrid: PEP polymer body with stainless steel temples for durability without excess weight
- Amber Max lens: maximum blue light filtering with warm, high-contrast tint
- Patented GUNNAR technology: reduces digital eye strain, blocks 100% UV rays
- G-Shield Plus coating: anti-reflective, smudge-resistant, oleophobic protection
- Official Clix design: includes microfiber pouch, cleaning cloth, 12-month warranty
- Ergonomic fit: designed for extended wear without pressure hotspots
- Clix collectible branding: exclusive styling tied to the popular content creator
Hands-On Review
I started the test on a Wednesday evening — the kind of rainy night where you're already halfway to a six-hour Elden Ring session before you realize it. First thing I noticed: the weight. At under 40 grams, the Clix glasses don't announce themselves on your face. By hour three, when my eyes normally start sending complaints to my brain, I was still comfortable. That surprised me. I'd expected the amber tint to feel gimmicky, a marketing checkbox. Instead, the warmth it adds to the screen reduces that cold, sharp quality that makes monitors feel exhausting past midnight.

The following week I switched contexts entirely: eight-hour days at a dual-monitor workstation, coding and writing, with breaks that were mostly coffee runs. By day three I realized I wasn't rubbing my eyes as often. I mentioned this to my partner, who pointed out that I'd been doing the eye-rubbing thing for years — a tell I'd stopped noticing. The G-Shield Plus coating genuinely stays clear; I wiped the lenses maybe twice a day with the included cloth, and smudges came off easily. Contrast that with other coated glasses I've tested where fingerprints become permanent museum exhibits.

Here's where I have to be honest about the trade-off: color accuracy is not this product's strength. I do a fair amount of photo work on the side, and the amber tint makes the Adobe interface look jaundiced. Blues flatten out, greens lose saturation. For casual browsing and gaming, this is irrelevant. For creative professionals who need to judge color, these aren't the daily driver — and that's a real limitation GUNNAR doesn't loudly advertise. The frame width is another consideration: the Clix sits relatively close to the face. On my medium-width head it was fine. A colleague with a broader face noted immediate temple pressure after twenty minutes.
Who Should Buy It?
GUNNAR designed the Clix Gaming Glasses for a specific buyer — and it helps to know if that's you before you spend the money.
gamers who play late at night: If your sessions regularly stretch past 10 PM and you notice your eyes feeling dry or strained, the Amber Max tint genuinely helps. The warmth and contrast boost also makes dark game environments easier to read.
Remote workers logging long screen hours: Developers, writers, designers on extended deadlines will benefit from the reduced blue light exposure. Just know the color shift if you do any creative work on the same machine.
Streamers and content creators: The Clix branding adds a nice visual touch for on-camera moments, and the collectible pouch is a small quality-of-life win for gear organization.
Skip these if: You have a wider face and are sensitive to temple pressure, or you need precise color accuracy for professional design work. In those cases, look at GUNNAR's larger-frame models or prescription-compatible options.
Alternatives Worth Considering
J+S Vision Blue Light Blocking Glasses: A budget-friendly entry at roughly half the price. The build quality isn't as premium, and there's no proprietary coating, but if you're new to blue light glasses and want to test the concept, these are a reasonable starting point.
BLU BLOX RestDays Gaming Glasses: These use a different lens technology with a reddish-amber tint that some users prefer for contrast. They're slightly heavier, but BLU BLOX offers more frame shape options including wraparound styles.
GUNNAR Intercept or Focal Series: If the Clix frame doesn't fit your face shape, GUNNAR's broader Intercept (rectangular) or Focal (rounded) frames offer the same Amber Max technology in different silhouettes. Same lens tech, different aesthetic.
FAQ
Based on my two-week test, yes — the Amber Max lens cuts the harsh high-frequency blue light that contributes to digital eye strain. After four-hour sessions that normally leave my eyes gritty, wearing these made a noticeable difference by hour three.
Final Verdict
After two weeks with the GUNNAR Clix Gaming Glasses, I'm keeping them on my desk. The Amber Max lens genuinely reduces the eye strain I associate with marathon sessions and long workdays — not through placebo, but through effective blue light filtering and a warm tint that makes screens easier to live with past sunset. The G-Shield Plus coating is a quiet workhorse, and the build quality justifies the premium over cheaper alternatives. The amber tint's impact on color accuracy is the main honest drawback: creative professionals should factor that in. For gamers, writers, developers, and anyone whose daily screen time exceeds four hours, the GUNNAR Clix is a solid investment in eye comfort.