Built for pickleball
It's not your reflexes. It's the glare.
On a bright court, glare flattens the contrast and the ball washes out — so you pick it up late and feel a step slow. It isn't your speed. It's what you're looking through. Cut the glare and the half-step comes back.
My partner asked what was different about me — I was just actually seeing the ball clearly for once.
⇆ Drag to see what glare hides
Same court. Same light. One side is fighting glare — the other isn't.
Why you're losing points in the sun
You blink, you squint, you're a half-step late.
Most players chalk it up to age or slowing reactions. Watch what actually happens in bright light — the problem isn't speed. You can't see the ball cleanly in the first place.
"The ball washes out against the glare."
Bright sun strips the contrast off the court, so a fast yellow ball blurs into the background exactly when you need it sharp.
"I pick it up late every rally."
React late, reach instead of set, and the dink catches you flat. It reads as slow hands — it's really late information.
"My depth goes unreliable."
Squinting through glare distorts how far away the ball reads. You misjudge the bounce — in front of everyone.
"By game three I'm cooked."
Hours of squinting means eye strain and headaches, and your focus fades right as the games get close.
Here's the part nobody tells you
This isn't a fitness problem. It's an equipment problem.
You don't need faster reactions. You need to see the ball sooner. The players who look quick on a sunny court aren't quicker — they're just not playing through a wall of glare.
The solution · ActiveDim Vision™
Meet the lens that cuts the glare.
Standard lenses just dim everything. ActiveDim Vision™ does two jobs at once — it strips out the glare that's hiding the ball, and pushes contrast back into the court so the ball, the lines, and the depth all pop.
Polarization kills the glare
Cuts the harsh reflected light bouncing off the court surface and the ball — the glare that's been flattening your view.
Contrast comes back
With the glare gone, the yellow ball separates from the court and the lines sharpen. You read it off the paddle, not at the bounce.
The lens adapts to the light
Clear enough for shaded and indoor play, darkening automatically as the sun climbs. One pair covers a full session — no swapping.
Straight answer on speed: the lens shifts in about 30 seconds moving indoors to bright sun — not instant, but you never take them off, and the polarization is cutting glare the whole time.
Adaptive lens
One pair. Every session.
Indoor lessons, early shade, midday sun — the lens works at every light level so you never carry a second pair.
Real players · real courts
They tell it better than we do
Different — not a gimmick
Hesitant bc of the price but wow. Play 4x a week and these are just different. The lens adjusting to the light actually works, not just a gimmick. 3 months in, zero issues. My buddy asked to borrow them — I said absolutely not lol.
The yellow ball pops
On a court with bright yellow balls this matters more than you'd think. No color distortion — just clean, sharp vision. Genuinely impressed.
Tames constant glare
I play in a coastal area, so glare off the court surface is constant. The polarization completely tames it. Also they look great — plenty of compliments from club members.
Most comfortable all day
I'm an instructor and wear glasses all day on court. By far the most comfortable pair I've owned for extended wear. My students keep asking about them.
Solved my eyewear struggle
Finding the right eyewear has always been a struggle. The Ultra handles morning shade and midday sun without me thinking about it. No fogging, no slipping. Best glasses I've worn on court.
Product engineering
Built to move.
Lightweight, adaptive, and engineered to lock on through a fast rally — not slip or distract.
Full-wrap MonoCurve™ shield — wide view, no frame edge in your side vision.
MonoCurve™ wide lens
Uninterrupted field of view — catch the cross-court ball and the poach sooner.
Polarized + adaptive optics
Cuts glare, restores contrast, and adjusts to the light on its own.
Aluminium-magnesium frame
Lightweight and tough — built for the demands of fast sport.
Adjustable nose pads
Bend wider or narrower for a secure, custom hold on any face.
No-slip sport fit
Stays put through hard movement and heavy sweat.
The honest comparison
Why players leave their $160–220 shields behind
The big brands charge for the logo. We charge for the lens — direct to you, no brand tax.
Same adaptive technology. No brand tax. Free returns if it isn't the best pair you've played in.
Got questions
Straight answers
Yes. The lens sits clear enough for indoor and shaded play, then darkens on its own in the sun — one pair across indoor lessons and outdoor sessions the same day.
Fair concern. Cheap photochromics can take minutes. The Ultra shifts in about 30 seconds indoors-to-sun, and because it's polarized it's cutting glare the whole time — even mid-transition it's working for you.
Full-wrap frame with adjustable nose pads you can bend wider or narrower. Buyers — including instructors who wear them for hours — consistently call it the most comfortable pair they've worn on court.
Yes — genuinely polarized to cut reflected glare off the court, plus UV400 blocking 100% of UVA and UVB. The glare control is the whole point of the lens.
Built on an aluminium-magnesium frame and backed by a 3-year warranty. If anything fails under normal use, we replace it.
Play a full session. If the glare isn't gone and the ball isn't sharper, send them back — returns are free and we cover them. You pay nothing.
Make the decision
Stop squinting through points you should be winning.
The player across the net is guessing at the ball. With the glare gone, you won't be. Zero risk — free returns, 3-year warranty.
Comparable adaptive sport shields: €150–200
Direct to you — no retail markup, no brand tax
In stock — ships within 24 hours
Add to Cart — €59.95★★★★★ Join 24,000+ verified customers
Playing doubles? 30% off your second pair — applied in cart