Immersed, a private spatial computing and AI company, is accepting retail investment at $0.79 per share through a Regulation A offering that closes July 30, having already raised over $34 million from more than 8,000 investors. The company reports 1.5 million users spending up to 60 hours a week inside its virtual workspace platform — usage it says makes Immersed the most-used AR/VR productivity app on the Meta Quest store. With a Qualcomm-partnered headset approaching mass production and an AI assistant rolling out new features, Immersed is pressing early software traction into a full hardware bet.
Who's Already In — and What They're Buying Into
Early backers include former Intel chief executive Pat Gelsinger, billionaire Mark McClain, and executives from Facebook, Reddit, Intel, and SailPoint, alongside investor Tim Tebow. Those names carry credibility, but the underlying commercial case rests on usage data: Immersed says its platform has accumulated the equivalent of 2,000 cumulative years of working time. The software supports multiple virtual displays and real-time team collaboration across macOS, Windows, and Linux, with technology partnerships in place with Meta, Qualcomm, Samsung, and Google.
The Hardware Bet: Visor Against Apple's Vision Pro
The company's next move is a device. Visor, developed in partnership with Qualcomm, carries 2 million more pixels than Apple's Vision Pro at 70% less cost and 70% less weight, according to Immersed. More than 75,000 people are on the waitlist, and the company is scaling toward mass production. Immersed projects $71 million in first-year hardware sales — a number that will define whether strong software engagement can convert into a viable device business.
Revenue Base and the Retail Window
Immersed reports over $7 million in revenue to date and frames its addressable market at more than $250 billion, pointing to the structural shift toward distributed work. The current Regulation A round allows new investors to participate at $0.79 per share, with bonus share allocations of up to 20% depending on investment size. The round closes July 30.
What the Traction Numbers Actually Prove
Immersed has solved one measurable problem — getting professionals to spend serious, sustained time inside a VR workspace. The harder problem comes next: converting behavioral proof into hardware demand at scale and margin. The $71 million hardware sales projection sits against a revenue base of $7 million, which signals how much of this story remains ahead of the company rather than behind it. Investors buying in at $0.79 are underwriting a projected outcome, not an established one. The July 30 close concentrates that decision.