Gear Review: GoodR Sunglasses

A successful piece of gear does its job and reduces distraction.

I used to use a pair of cheap sunglasses that I picked up at some store. Since discovering GoodR Sunglasses, I have realized how important it is to have comfort, even in the smallest pieces of gear.

GoodR Sunglasses has sizes in “normal” and wide head options and range from $25 to $35 per pair. They even have blue-blocking lenses. I bought the Falkor’s Fever Dream for $25. These sunglasses have mirror reflective lenses, are for “regular heads”, and are best for road, trail, or “taco runs”.

Amie at Island Time Run with GoodR Sunglasses
Amie wearing GoodR Sunglasses

What I Like

Light-weight sunglasses that don’t put pressure on my nose. I can wear them for hours and not notice them.

They stay put. No bouncing or slipping, no matter how sweaty I get.

The lenses are polarized. They do reduce glare and have UV400 protection that blocks 100% of harmful UVA and UVB rays.

I love the mirror reflective lenses.

What I Don’t Like

While they don’t bounce or slip, on rare occasions they rub. Not enough to cause problems or make me want to stop using them, but it can be annnoying.

The shape doesn’t block out all of the light on the sides. GoodR does have some sunglasses with different shapes that might be better at this than the Falkor’s Fever Dream.

On extremely bright days, I find them to not be dark enough for me.

Overall

I love my GoodR Sunglasses and highly recommend them. I’m so impressed with them that I plan on buying a second pair soon. They offer 30-day free returns if you’re not happy with them, a one-year warranty, and are a 100% carbon neutral company.

For more information and to see the variety of sunglasses, visit GoodR.

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