<img src="https://b.scorecardresearch.com/p?c1=2&amp;c2=6035191&amp;cv=2.0&amp;cj=1" width="1" height="1" style="width:0px;height:0px;">

Mark Zuckerberg is working on “Call of Duty goggles” for a military defense tech company

The future is here. Meta enters the defense sector with an Anduril partnership to build an extended reality headset for the US military.

Olga Racinowska

Mark Zuckerberg is working on “Call of Duty goggles” for a military defense tech company, image source: flickr, photo by JD Lasica.
Mark Zuckerberg is working on “Call of Duty goggles” for a military defense tech company Source: flickr, photo by JD Lasica.

Meta, led by Mark Zuckerberg, is making a shift into the defense world by teaming up with Anduril, a military tech company started by Palmer Luckey. They’re collaborating on a high-tech extended reality (XR) headset project called EagleEye – or, as some have nicknamed it, the “Call of Duty goggles.” The headsets are designed to boost soldiers' senses and help them control autonomous systems out in the field.

From Virtual Reality to real combat

According to the After pouring tons of money into VR and AR with little payoff so far, the company is now looking to redirect that tech toward military use. This puts Meta in the same lane as other tech giants like Google, Microsoft, and Amazon, who’ve also been chasing defense contracts.

Orion AR glasses.Source: Meta

What’s also interesting is that this partnership marks a reunion between Zuckerberg and Luckey, who was pushed out of Facebook back in 2016 over political drama. Their new collaboration shows that Meta isn’t shy about getting involved in the defense space – a pretty different vibe from some other tech companies trying to keep things low-key.

Of course, this turn raises some serious and complex questions around privacy, ethics, and the growing role of tech companies in modern warfare. It’s not just about new gadgets or finding another revenue stream, it touches on how much influence private tech firms should have in shaping military capabilities and global conflict. It’s part of a broader trend where Silicon Valley is building closer ties with the defense world, blurring the lines between consumer technology and military innovation. for Meta, it signals a major shift in both its business strategy and how it wants to be seen by the public.

Like it?

0

Olga Racinowska

Author: Olga Racinowska

Been with gamepressure.isosite.org since 2019, mostly writing game guides but you can also find me geeking out about LEGO (huge collection, btw). Love RPGs and classic RTSs, also adore quirky indie games. Even with a ton of games, sometimes I just gotta fire up Harvest Moon, Stardew Valley, KOTOR, or Baldur's Gate 2 (Shadows of Amn, the OG, not that Throne of Bhaal stuff). When I'm not gaming, I'm probably painting miniatures or iring my collection of retro consoles.