HDZero Launches BoxPro and BoxPro+ FPV Goggles for Competitive Pilots
HDZero's BoxPro and BoxPro+ box-style goggles hit reseller pages with a 100Hz, 1800-nit LCD built for 90Hz racing.

Reseller pages for the HDZero BoxPro and BoxPro+ box-style FPV goggles went live across multiple outlets, with listings pointing to preorder availability and a mid-March ship window. The rollout was retailer-driven: no complete official announcement from HDZero accompanied the wave of product pages, but the specifications and marketing copy posted by resellers painted a clear enough picture of what the company is bringing to the competitive pilot market.
The headline number is the display: a 100Hz LCD rated at 1800 nits. For racing applications, that combination of refresh rate and brightness addresses two persistent complaints about box-style goggles, namely washed-out visuals in bright outdoor conditions and motion blur during high-speed gate runs. Reseller copy positions the BoxPro as "ideal for 90Hz HDZero racing," which slots it directly into the competitive format HDZero has built its ecosystem around.
On the connectivity side, the BoxPro supports both digital and HDMI video inputs, and resellers note that its inputs and outputs match those on HDZero's flagship OLED goggles. That compatibility detail matters for pilots who already own HDZero gear: switching to the BoxPro or BoxPro+ does not require rewiring a bench setup or replacing accessories. The reseller description summarizes the positioning plainly: the BoxPro "packs flagship features without the premium cost."
RacedayQuads was among the retailers with product pages live, though the site returned a "couldn't load pickup availability" notice on its listing, suggesting either a temporary inventory display error or that in-store pickup had not yet been configured for the new SKUs.

The distinction between the standard BoxPro and the BoxPro+ was not detailed in the available reseller copy. Pricing, latency figures in milliseconds, weight, battery specifications, and details under the goggles' spec sheet headings, which include categories for comfort and optics, power and cooling, DVR and recording, and display and latency, were not included in the materials resellers published at launch. Those gaps leave meaningful questions open for pilots trying to make a purchasing decision before hardware reaches their hands.
What is clear is that HDZero is pushing a box-goggle option squarely at the racing segment rather than the cinematic or freestyle markets, and doing so at a price point the company itself is characterizing as below flagship territory. Whether the 1800-nit LCD holds up against OLED alternatives in latency-sensitive competition is the question hands-on testing will have to answer.
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