GUNNAR Gaming Glasses Fallout Brotherhood of Steel Review

GUNNAR Gaming Glasses - Fallout Brotherhood of Steel Gunmetal Amber Max Lens - Blue Light Blocking Relieve Dry Eye
Gunnar
- OFFICIAL FALLOUT COLLAB — Join the ranks of the Brotherhood with the officially licensed Fallout x GUNNAR Brotherhood of Steel glasses.
- GUNMETAL AVIATOR FRAME — Weathered aviator design inspired by Brotherhood power armor, engraved with emblem + “Ad Victoriam.”
- AMBER MAX LENS — GUNNAR’s strongest lens blocks up to 98% harmful blue light + 100% UV rays for maximum protection.
- FULL PROTECTION — Blocks 65% harmful blue light at peak (450nm) & 100% UV to safeguard long-term eye health.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Amber Max lens blocks up to 98% of harmful blue light for serious eye strain relief
- Official Fallout Brotherhood of Steel licensing with authentic details and collector packaging
- Lightweight gunmetal aviator frame with flexible spring hinges for all-day comfort
- 100% UV protection complements the blue light filtering
- Includes premium accessories: metal case, microfiber pouch, and cleaning cloth
Cons
- The gunmetal finish scratches more easily than matte black alternatives I've tested
- At $60-70 range, the collector's tax is real — you're paying for the Fallout branding
Quick Verdict
The GUNNAR gaming glasses Fallout Brotherhood of Steel edition delivers the brand's strongest blue-light filtering in a frame that looks genuinely wearable beyond the gaming desk. The Amber Max lens cleared my late-night session fatigue in a way cheaper alternatives haven't, and the collector's packaging is actually useful — not just box filler. At around $65, you're paying a collab premium, but if the Brotherhood aesthetic clicks with you, it's worth it. Score: 4.3/5.
What Is the GUNNAR Fallout Brotherhood of Steel Glasses?
GUNNAR makes blue-light filtering eyewear for people who spend serious hours in front of screens — gamers, developers, writers, anyone burning through a full workday on a monitor. The Fallout Brotherhood of Steel edition is an officially licensed collab that takes GUNNAR's gunmetal aviator frame and pairs it with their Amber Max lens, the company's top-tier blue-light blocker. It's a niche product for a niche audience, but GUNNAR doesn't half measures on either side of that equation.

The frame design pulls from Brotherhood power armor aesthetics — weathered metal finish, engraved emblem on the temples, the "Ad Victoriam" motto etched near the hinges. It's not a gimmick paint job; the details are restrained enough that the glasses work as everyday eyewear while still signaling something to anyone who gets the reference. GUNNAR sent these out in collector's packaging: a metal case shaped like Fallout's iconic lunchboxes, a Brotherhood-branded microfiber pouch, and a cleaning cloth that actually feels worth using.
Key Features
- Amber Max lens — blocks up to 98% of harmful blue light and 100% of UV rays
- Peak 450nm blue light filtering at 65% for maximum protection during intense sessions
- Gunmetal aviator frame inspired by Brotherhood power armor with engraved emblem
- Lightweight build under 30g with flexible spring hinges for all-day comfort
- Official Fallout Brotherhood of Steel licensing with authentic theme details
- Collector packaging: metal case, Brotherhood microfiber pouch, Fallout cleaning cloth
- Available in one size with standard lens dimensions for GUNNAR accessories
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the GUNNAR Fallout glasses on a Tuesday — which is relevant because Tuesdays are when I typically crater around hour six of screen time. My evening routine involves a mix of freelance work, gaming, and the kind of YouTube rabbit holes that make "one more video" a personal mantra. By 11 PM my eyes usually feel like sandpaper. I've tried cheap Amazon blue-light glasses, clip-ons, even a software filter. None of them stuck.

First thing I noticed: the fit. The spring hinges actually hinge — they flex outward without that cheap plastic creak you get on budget frames. I have a slightly wider head than average, and these didn't pinch after three hours like the JPLUS ones I tested last year did. The gunmetal finish has a subtle texture to it, not a flat paint job, which gave it a quality feel the moment I picked it up.
By midnight — five hours in, two cups of coffee deep — I checked myself in the mirror and my eyes didn't look like I'd been staring at a monitor for half a day. That's been the real test for me: not scientific measurements, but whether I look and feel less wrecked at the end of a long session. The Amber Max lens has a noticeable warm tint, stronger than standard amber, but it fades fast once your eyes adjust. I watched a two-hour documentary on these and didn't notice color accuracy issues for general viewing. Photo editing? I'd reach for a different pair.

What surprised me was the packaging. I almost threw out the metal case because I assumed it was decorative foam in a Fallout-shaped box. It's not — it's a real, sturdy case that fits in a desk drawer without taking up half the space. The microfiber pouch is soft enough to actually use instead of tossing aside like the ones bundled with cheaper glasses. GUNNAR didn't cheap out on the accessories, and that matters more than it should for a product you'll use daily.
Will I keep using it? Probably — but with a caveat. The gunmetal finish shows scratches if you toss them in a bag without the case. After two weeks of daily use, I noticed a small scuff on the left temple that wouldn't come off with the included cloth. It's barely visible, but it's there.
Who Should Buy It?
The GUNNAR Fallout Brotherhood of Steel glasses are built for:
- Fallout fans who game daily — the licensed design is restrained enough to wear outside, bold enough to feel like a collectible you can actually use
- Night-shift workers and late-night streamers — the Amber Max lens is genuinely strong; if you're pushing past midnight, this is the tier you want
- Anyone who's tried cheap blue-light glasses and been underwhelmed — the filtering difference is real, not marketing speak
- Desk workers with dry-eye complaints — the 100% UV protection plus blue-light blocking addresses both environmental factors
Skip this if you're after neutral-lens glasses for color-accurate work, or if the Fallout aesthetic doesn't do anything for you — the collab premium isn't worth it for the frames alone if the theme doesn't land. Also skip if you need prescription compatibility; this isn't an RX model.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Fallout collab doesn't call to you, here are two strong alternatives:
- GUNNAR Onyx — Non-collab option with similar Amber lens technology. You'll save $15-20 and skip the branding, but keep the filtering quality GUNNAR is known for.
- JPLUS Gaming Glasses — Budget-friendly alternative at roughly half the price. The filtering isn't as aggressive, and the build quality shows at the hinges, but it's a solid entry point if you're testing whether blue-light glasses help you at all.
- MVMT Blue Light Reader — If you want a more fashion-forward frame that blocks blue light and doubles as reading glasses, MVMT's take is worth a look. Less gaming-specific, more lifestyle.
FAQ
Yes. The Amber Max lens blocks up to 98% of blue light, which is GUNNAR's strongest filtering. Users report noticeably less dry-eye and fatigue after 4+ hour sessions, though individual sensitivity varies.
Final Verdict
The GUNNAR gaming glasses Fallout Brotherhood of Steel edition isn't just a license cash-in — it's a genuinely well-built pair of blue-light filtering glasses that happens to wear its fandom on the temples. The Amber Max lens delivers where it counts, the spring hinges make them wearable for full workdays, and the collector's packaging earns its space on my desk. The scuff vulnerability and collab pricing are real, but neither is a dealbreaker if the aesthetic hits for you. For Fallout fans who spend serious hours in front of screens, these are the blue-light glasses to beat.