Immersed’s Spatial Computing Window Is Open at $0.79. A 20-Year Trading Streak Just Pointed Away From SpaceX

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Spatial Computing’s breakout moment is here


Everyone loves to say: “Oh, I knew about that company before it exploded…”

But most people don’t.

So when Immersed potentially goes public, most people will have missed the Spatial Computing darling sitting at the center of a $1 trillion market, one that’s completely rethinking how 32 million remote workers do their jobs, replacing cluttered desks with a virtual office you wear.

You can still get in, though. But not for long.

This isn’t just another startup with a shiny pitch deck.

This is:

✔  1.5M+ real users
✔  Runs on Apple, Meta AND Samsung hardware
✔  AI agent (Curator) already live
✔  Visor headset already shipping
✔  7,000+ investors already in
✔  Intel’s former CEO invested
✔  NASDAQ ticker $IMRS secured

And now? This round is open to all investors.

So invest now, and when someone says they “knew about Immersed before it went public” … you’ll be able to say: “Yeah, I invested.”

🚨 Round closing. Invest at $0.79 Now →


Immersed is offering securities through the use of an Offering Statement that has been qualified by the Securities and Exchange Commission under Tier II of Regulation A. The valuation is set by the Company and there is currently no public market for the Company’s Common Stock. Please read the offering circular and related risks at invest.immersed.com. Nasdaq ticker “IMRS” has been reserved by Immersed and any potential listing is subject to future regulatory approval and market conditions.


The Pre-IPO Door That Used to Stay Closed

For most of modern market history, retail investors got one shot at a hyper-growth company: after the IPO, at the price the institutions had already marked up. Venture capital and Wall Street took the first slice; everyone else paid for what was left. Regulation A+ rewrote that mechanic. It opened a path for ordinary investors to take a position before the public listing — not at insider terms, but before the day-one premium. Immersed’s current offering is one of those windows. It will not stay open indefinitely.

What this means for your retirement accounts: When a Reg A+ company has 1.5 million users, a shipping product that genuinely outperforms Apple Vision Pro on weight and price, an AI assistant already in production, a former Intel CEO on the cap table, and a Nasdaq ticker reserved — the question isn’t whether the business is real. It is. The question is whether you take a position before the public market sets the price, or after. The standard Reg A+ realities still apply: shares are illiquid until a potential listing, the valuation is set by the company, a reserved ticker signals intent rather than a guaranteed IPO.

Why “Works on Everything” Is the Filter Most Retail Investors Miss

Spatial Computing has had a coronation problem. Apple shipped the Vision Pro. Meta has shipped the Quest line. Samsung has shipped its Galaxy XR. Google, Microsoft, and ByteDance all have hardware programs. And every one of those companies wants their headset to be the platform you live in. The investor question that matters underneath that turf war is which software actually runs everywhere — because the software that runs everywhere is the software that captures the user. Immersed runs on Apple Vision Pro, Meta Quest, HTC, Samsung, Pico, and ByteDance hardware. That is not a marketing claim. It is the company’s deployed reality, documented across every major XR review.


Why this matters if you’re retired or near retirement: Forty to sixty hours per week of in-headset engagement is not a metric a beta product produces. That is the engagement profile of a daily-driver tool — the kind of usage that signals genuine product-market fit. Combined with hardware that’s independently confirmed to outperform Apple Vision Pro on weight and resolution, at a fraction of the cost, the position is unusual: a Reg A+ offering on a company that already has the operating metrics most pre-IPO companies are still trying to manufacture.

The Biggest IPO in History Is Coming. That Doesn’t Mean It’s the Trade.

Eight days ago, SpaceX filed its S-1 with the SEC. The target valuation is $1.75 trillion. The expected Nasdaq listing under SPCX is June 12. The retail allocation is unusually large — roughly 30% of the offering, or about $22.5 billion in shares. By any normal measure, this is the financial event of 2026. And by any normal measure, every retail investor in America is about to hear about it from every newsletter, every brokerage app, every cable-news ticker, for weeks.


What this means for your retirement accounts: The headline trade is rarely the best trade. When every investor is staring at the same ticker, the price is set by the staring, not by the fundamentals. The most experienced traders in the world tend to look away from the screen everyone else is watching. One of those traders — a hedge fund manager who never had a losing year for two decades — just published exactly that argument. He says the real money this summer flows into a different ticker entirely.

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Everyone is obsessed with SpaceX. That’s the wrong play


SpaceX is already valued at $1.75 trillion before a single share trades publicly.

The investors who got rich on SpaceX got in years ago.

Larry Benedict — who didn’t have a losing year for 20 consecutive years — says while the world is fixated on the IPO, billions of dollars are quietly being set up to flow into ONE forgotten ticker.

He’s revealing the name completely free.

Click Here to See where Larry is Positioning His Readers →

Two Different Windows. One Calm Mindset.


The discipline that ties Immersed and Larry Benedict’s thesis together is the same: position before the news cycle catches up. With Immersed, that means recognizing the operating metrics — 1.5 million users, a shipping headset that beats Apple on weight and resolution, an AI assistant in production — before the company crosses the line into being a public ticker everyone has heard of. With Benedict, it means recognizing that when the entire investing universe is staring at one stock, the asymmetric trade is often the one nobody is looking at.


Why this matters if you’re retired or near retirement: Both windows reward the same posture — act before the news catches up, decide where you stand before everyone else has to. The Immersed offering has a hard close. Benedict’s briefing is free. The work is to read both with eyes open and decide what, if anything, fits your accounts. The compounding edge belongs to the prepared, not the loudest.

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Everyone is obsessed with SpaceX. That's the wrong play

SpaceX is already valued at $1.75 trillion before a single share trades publicly. The investors who got rich on SpaceX got in years ago. Larry Benedict — who didn’t have a losing year for 20 consecutive years — says while the world is fixated on the IPO, billions of dollars are quietly being set up to flow into one forgotten ticker. He’s revealing the name completely free.


Bottom Line

Two windows are open this week, and both involve looking past the noise. Immersed — an Austin-based Spatial Computing company with 1.5 million unique users, a Visor headset that’s independently confirmed to weigh less than 200 grams and run at 4K per eye, an AI assistant called Curator already live in production, hardware-agnostic compatibility across Apple Vision Pro / Meta Quest / Samsung / HTC / Pico / ByteDance, and a Nasdaq ticker $IMRS reserved — is running a Reg A+ offering at $0.79/share that the company is calling its final round before a potential public listing. The cap table includes Pat Gelsinger, the former CEO of Intel, and roughly 7,000 investors are already in.

The Spatial Computing thesis is independently durable. Apple, Meta, Samsung, Google, Microsoft, ByteDance — every major platform has shipped or is shipping headset hardware, and the software that runs across all of them is the software most likely to capture the user. Immersed runs across all of them. With 40 to 60 hours of in-headset engagement per active user per week, the product has the kind of stickiness that pre-IPO companies usually have to project rather than demonstrate. For an investor wanting Reg A+ exposure to the category that Apple, Meta, and Samsung are now openly competing in, the offering deserves a calm read rather than a reflex reaction in either direction.

The second window has nothing to do with Immersed. SpaceX is valued at $1.75 trillion before a single share trades publicly, and the investors who got rich on SpaceX got in years ago. Larry Benedict — a former hedge fund manager who didn’t have a losing year for 20 consecutive years, was featured in Jack Schwager’s Hedge Fund Market Wizards, and ran his fund in the top 1% by Barron’s rankings — argues that while the entire market is fixated on the SpaceX IPO, billions of dollars are quietly being set up to flow into one forgotten ticker. He is revealing the name of that ticker completely free in a new briefing. The discipline he’s applying is the same discipline that produced his track record: when everyone is staring at the same trade, the asymmetric position is usually somewhere else.

Forget the hot picks. Protect what you’ve already built. Both windows reward the same posture — act before the news cycle catches up, decide where you stand before everyone else has to. One is a pre-IPO software position with measurable operating metrics. The other is a thesis from one of the most documented risk managers in modern markets. Read both with eyes open. The compounding edge has always belonged to the prepared, not the loudest. Because the best trade you’ll ever make is the loss you never took.

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