
Mixed Reality (MR) is a technology that blends the real world and digital world so they interact with each other in real time.
It goes a step beyond Augmented Reality.
🧠 What makes MR different
- AR = adds digital objects on top of reality
- MR = digital objects understand and interact with reality
👉 In MR, virtual objects don’t just appear—they behave as if they’re part of your physical environment.
🧩 Simple example
Imagine wearing a headset like Microsoft HoloLens 2:
- A virtual ball is placed on your real table
- If you push it, it rolls across the table
- If it reaches the edge, it falls off
The digital object respects real-world surfaces and physics—that’s Mixed Reality.
🔑 Key Features of MR
- Real + virtual integration
- Spatial awareness (understands walls, floors, objects)
- Interaction between real and virtual elements
- Anchored objects (stay fixed in your environment)
🆚 AR vs VR vs MR
| Feature | AR | VR | MR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real world visible | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ |
| Virtual world replaces reality | ❌ | ✅ | ❌ |
| Interaction with real environment | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ |
🧩 Common Uses
- Advanced training (engineering, medical procedures)
- Design & architecture (placing 3D models in real space)
- Remote collaboration (shared virtual objects in real rooms)
- Industrial work (guided repairs with interactive overlays)
🧠 Simple analogy
- AR = seeing a hologram floating in your room
- MR = that hologram sits on your chair and reacts when you touch it
🚀 Real-world devices
- Microsoft HoloLens 2
- Apple Vision Pro