Demo

Over at the FN booth, there’s one optic getting a lot of second looks and once you actually get behind it, you understand why.

The new FN PUREVIEW isn’t just another micro red dot trying to squeeze into an already crowded market. FN is doing something different here.

This is being billed as the first holographic pistol optic.

Not “red dot with tweaks.” Not “slightly better glass.” Actually different.

Instead of the typical curved lens setup you see on most pistol optics, the PUREVIEW uses a flat pane of glass and projects the reticle using holographic-style technology. The result is a noticeably cleaner sight picture with less distortion, and it feels a lot closer to looking through a full-size holographic sight than a traditional pistol dot.

It’s one of those things that’s hard to explain until you look through it. But once you do, it clicks.

The reticle is a 3 MOA dot, and FN says the system is truly parallax-free, with better light transmission thanks to that flat glass design. Another interesting detail: even if the glass cracks, the reticle is designed to stay visible and hold zero.

That’s a pretty bold claim.

From a usability standpoint, FN kept things practical. There’s a top-loading battery, so you don’t have to pull the optic and rezero every time you swap a CR2032. Controls are tactile, with 14 brightness settings, including night vision modes and a few extra-bright options for harsh lighting.

Battery life is the tradeoff.

You’re looking at about 800 hours of continuous use, which is lower than a lot of traditional red dots. That said, it does have an auto shutoff and standby mode, so in real-world use, FN says you can stretch that out significantly.

Mounting-wise, it’s designed to work with FN’s MRD lineup like the 509, 510, 545, and Five-seveN, and the whole unit is built from 7075 aluminum, fully enclosed, and rated to handle everything from extreme cold to serious abuse.

Size and weight are right in line with what you’d expect from a micro optic (just over 1.5 ounces) so it’s not adding much bulk to a carry setup.

At the end of the day, this isn’t just another incremental upgrade. It’s FN taking a swing at changing how pistol optics actually work.

Whether it catches on is another question. But after getting eyes on it, this is easily one of the more interesting pieces of gear we’ve seen at the show so far. MSRP is $749.

Learn more HERE.

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