Today I was given the honor of presenting my vision “Societal XR” in a guest article for mixed.de, Germany’s first and widest-reach online magazine for mixed reality and the future of computers. This article is a little more philosophical and primarily addresses the question of how our idea of “reality” changes when virtual offers or digital content are integrated into our reality. A smartwatch, for example, shows digital information calculated by a computer, such as the time or the current date, using a display. A projector can project the contents of a PowerPoint presentation onto a screen in a lecture hall. However, hardly anyone would describe both situations as augmented reality, even though virtual offers and digital content are displayed and thereby augment the reality. So when will virtual offers become part of our reality? What is “virtual” and what is “real”? What will our reality and daily lives look like in 30 years when XR will be available in public spaces? And what would Mark Weiser, the father of ubiquitous computing, say about this?