Osight, the optics brand under Olight, launched two enclosed-emitter pistol red dots in June 2026 that are now shipping through the Osight store and Amazon. RECOIL covered both at the end of June. The XE AMRS is priced at $249.99 on the RMR footprint; the companion SE 6 MOA comes in at $199.99 on the RMSc footprint, sized for compact and subcompact carry guns.
The XE AMRS centers on what Osight calls the Advanced Multi-Reticle System. Rather than a single dot size, the optic cycles through five configurations: a 2 MOA dot, a 2 MOA dot paired with a 32 MOA ring, a 6 MOA dot, a 6 MOA dot with the 32 MOA ring, and the 32 MOA ring alone. That range covers precise target shooting at the 2 MOA end and fast acquisition at speed with the 6 MOA, while the circle-dot combinations offer a traditional sight picture for shooters who prefer it. Battery access is side-loading, using a CR1632 cell rated between 61,000 and 105,000 hours depending on brightness setting. The housing is sealed to IPX7 and ships with a collapsible backup rear iron sight built into the body.
The RMR footprint means the XE AMRS drops directly onto a large installed base of optics-ready pistols — Glock MOS models, SIG P320 and P226 variants, Smith & Wesson M&P Core pistols, and others — without an adapter plate. A backup sight is increasingly expected at this price point, and Osight includes one at a price that undercuts competitors like the SIG ROMEO-MDC and the Steiner MPS-C, which retails near $575.
The SE 6 MOA is a smaller companion built for slim-frame carry guns. On the RMSc footprint, it fits the Glock 43X and 48, Springfield Hellcat, SIG P365 series, and similar micro-compacts. It runs a 6 MOA dot with 63,000 hours of battery life. Both optics are covered by a fully transferable lifetime warranty that requires no registration paperwork — a point Osight is using as a differentiator against brands that tie warranty coverage to the original purchaser.
At $249.99, the XE AMRS puts five reticle modes, an enclosed emitter, and an integrated backup sight on the RMR footprint in a bracket occupied by the Holosun EPS series and SIG ROMEO-MDC. Whether the AMRS switching system delivers enough practical benefit over a well-chosen single reticle depends on how the shooter uses the gun — competition and range shooters have more use for multiple reticle modes than someone who runs the optic exclusively on a carry pistol. The SE 6 MOA at $199 has fewer direct competitors in the RMSc enclosed-emitter space at that price.
Both optics are available now from osight.com and through Amazon.



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