MICROVISION INC
424B4, 1996-08-28
ELECTRONIC COMPONENTS, NEC
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<PAGE>
                        FILED PURSUANT TO RULE 424(b)(4)
                        REGISTRATION NUMBER 333-5276-LA
 
                                2,250,000 UNITS
 
                                     [LOGO]
 
               EACH UNIT CONSISTING OF ONE SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
             AND ONE WARRANT TO PURCHASE ONE SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
 
    Microvision,   Inc.,   a  Washington   corporation  ("Microvision"   or  the
"Company"),  is  hereby  offering  2,250,000  units  (the  "Units"),  each  Unit
consisting of one share of the Company's common stock, no par value (the "Common
Stock"), and one warrant to purchase one share of Common Stock (the "Warrants").
See "Underwriting" for a discussion of the factors considered in determining the
initial  offering  price  (the  "Unit Offering  Price").  The  Common  Stock and
Warrants that make up the Units will separate immediately upon issuance and will
trade only as separate  securities. Each Warrant  initially entitles the  holder
thereof to purchase one share of Common Stock at an exercise price of $12.00 per
share, subject to certain adjustments. The Warrants are exercisable at any time,
unless previously redeemed, until the fifth anniversary of the effective date of
this  offering,  subject  to  certain conditions.  The  Company  may  redeem the
outstanding Warrants, in whole  or in part,  at any time upon  at least 30  days
prior  written notice to the registered holders  thereof, at a price of $.25 per
Warrant, provided that the  closing bid price  of the Common  Stock has been  at
least  200% of the exercise price of the Warrants for each of the 20 consecutive
trading days immediately preceding the date of the notice of redemption.
 
    Prior to  this offering,  there has  been no  public market  for the  Units,
Common  Stock or Warrants, and there can  be no assurance that an active trading
market will develop or  be maintained following the  offering. The Common  Stock
and  Warrants have been approved for listing on the Nasdaq National Market under
the symbols "MVIS" and "MVISW," respectively.
 
    THE SECURITIES  OFFERED HEREBY  INVOLVE A  HIGH DEGREE  OF RISK.  SEE  "RISK
FACTORS" BEGINNING AT PAGE 7.
                             ---------------------
 
THESE  SECURITIES HAVE  NOT BEEN APPROVED  OR DISAPPROVED BY  THE SECURITIES AND
EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR ANY STATE SECURITIES COMMISSION NOR HAS THE  SECURITIES
  AND  EXCHANGE COMMISSION OR  ANY STATE SECURITIES  COMMISSION PASSED UPON
     THE ACCURACY OR ADEQUACY OF  THIS PROSPECTUS. ANY REPRESENTATION  TO
       THE  CONTRARY IS A                                      CRIMINAL
                                    OFFENSE.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                             UNDERWRITING DISCOUNTS
                                                      PRICE TO PUBLIC         AND COMMISSIONS (1)     PROCEEDS TO COMPANY (2)
<S>                                               <C>                       <C>                       <C>
Per Unit........................................           $8.00                     $0.608                    $7.392
Total (3).......................................        $18,000,000                $1,368,000               $16,632,000
</TABLE>
 
(1) Excludes  a  nonaccountable expense  allowance  payable by  the  Company  to
    Paulson Investment Company, Inc. and marion bass securities corporation, the
    representatives  (the  "Representatives") of  the several  underwriters (the
    "Underwriters"), equal  to 2%  of  the aggregate  Unit Offering  Price.  The
    Company  also has agreed  (i) to issue warrants  to the Representatives (the
    "Representatives' Warrants")  to purchase  in the  aggregate up  to  178,075
    Units  exercisable at $9.60 per Unit (120%  of the Unit Offering Price), and
    (ii) to register for resale  the securities underlying the  Representatives'
    Warrants.  The  Company has  agreed  to indemnify  the  Underwriters against
    certain liabilities, including liabilities under the Securities Act of 1933,
    as amended (the "Securities Act"). See "Underwriting."
 
(2) Before deducting expenses of this offering payable by the Company  estimated
    at   $889,000,   including  the   Representatives'   nonaccountable  expense
    allowance.
 
(3)  The  Company  has  granted   the  Representatives  a  45-day  option   (the
    "Overallotment  Option") to purchase  up to 337,500 Units  on the same terms
    and conditions  as set  forth  above, solely  for  the purpose  of  covering
    overallotments,  if any. If  the Overallotment Option  is exercised in full,
    the total  Price  to  Public, Underwriting  Discounts  and  Commissions  and
    Proceeds  to  Company  will  be  $20,700,000,  $1,573,200  and  $19,126,800,
    respectively. See "Underwriting."
                         ------------------------------
 
    The Units offered by this Prospectus are offered by the several Underwriters
subject  to  prior  sale,  when  and  if  delivered  to  and  accepted  by   the
Underwriters,  and subject to the right to reject  any order in whole or in part
and to certain other conditions. It is expected that delivery of the Units  will
be made in New York, New York on or about August 30, 1996.
 
PAULSON INVESTMENT COMPANY, INC.
                                              MARION BASS SECURITIES CORPORATION
 
                THE DATE OF THIS PROSPECTUS IS AUGUST 27, 1996.
<PAGE>
                                     [LOGO]
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                <C>                                <C>
                                                                      The Company expects that its technology
                                   The Company's objective is to be   will permit the use of highly
Microvision's patented display     a leading provider of personal     miniaturized, lightweight,
technology allows electronically   display products in a broad range  battery-operated, viewing devices that
generated images to be projected   of professional and consumer       can be comfortably held or worn as
directly onto the viewer's eye.    applications.                      "headphones for the eyes."
</TABLE>
 
Augmented Vision Systems
 
AUGMENTED VISION APPLICATIONS SUPERIMPOSE HIGH CONTRAST, MONOCHROMATIC IMAGES OR
INFORMATION ON THE VIEWER'S FIELD OF VISION AS A MEANS OF ENHANCING THE SAFETY,
PRECISION AND SPEED OF THE USER'S PERFORMANCE OF TASKS. FOR EXAMPLE, A
HEAD-MOUNTED DISPLAY COULD SUPERIMPOSE CRITICAL PATIENT INFORMATION IN A
SURGEON'S FIELD OF VISION. VITAL SIGNS, EKG TRACES, REFERENCE MATERIALS, X-RAYS
OR MRI IMAGES COULD BE MONITORED WITHOUT REQUIRING THE SURGEON TO LOOK UP FROM A
PROCEDURE. FOR MILITARY APPLICATIONS, TROOPS COULD BE EQUIPPED WITH EYEGLASSES
THAT DISPLAY HIGH DEFINITION IMAGERY WHICH COULD BE VIEWED DURING THE DAYTIME
WITHOUT BLOCKING NORMAL VISION AND COULD ASSIST IN THREAT DETECTION,
RECONNAISSANCE,
MAINTENANCE AND OTHER ACTIVITIES.
 
Visual Simulation and Entertainment Displays
 
MANUFACTURERS OF INTERACTIVE MEDIA PRODUCTS HAVE RECOGNIZED THAT THE VISUAL
EXPERIENCE OFFERED BY SIMULATION IS ENHANCED BY HIGH RESOLUTION,
THREE-DIMENSIONAL DISPLAYS PROJECTED OVER A WIDE FIELD OF VISION. ALTHOUGH
SIMULATED ENVIRONMENTS TRADITIONALLY HAVE BEEN USED AS A TRAINING TOOL FOR
PROFESSIONAL USE, THEY ARE INCREASINGLY POPULAR AS A MEANS OF ENTERTAINMENT,
PARTICULARLY IN COMPUTER GAMES. IN A THREE-DIMENSIONAL VIDEO GAME, FOR EXAMPLE,
AN INEXPENSIVE PAIR OF VIRTUAL RETINAL DISPLAY EYEGLASSES WITH A WIDE FIELD OF
VIEW COULD PROVIDE A HIGHLY IMMERSIVE VISUAL EXPERIENCE.
 
THE ABOVE IS AN ARTIST'S RENDERING PREPARED FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY TO
DEMONSTRATE A PROPOSED PRODUCT AND POSSIBLE APPLICATION FOR THE COMPANY'S
TECHNOLOGY. THIS RENDERING DOES NOT DEPICT AN ACTUAL PRODUCT OR CURRENT
APPLICATION. THE COMPANY HAS BUILT ONLY PORTABLE AND TABLE-TOP PROTOTYPES TO
DATE. THE PROTOTYPES ARE WORKING MODELS OF THE TECHNOLOGY AND ARE NOT
INCORPORATED INTO ANY PRODUCT CONFIGURATION OR DESIGNED FOR ANY SPECIFIC
APPLICATION. SEE "BUSINESS -- PROTOTYPES."
 
                         ------------------------------
 
THE COMPANY HAS NOT PREVIOUSLY BEEN SUBJECT TO THE REPORTING REQUIREMENTS OF THE
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934, AS AMENDED (THE "EXCHANGE ACT"). THE COMPANY
INTENDS TO FURNISH ITS SHAREHOLDERS WITH ANNUAL REPORTS CONTAINING FINANCIAL
STATEMENTS AUDITED BY ITS INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS AND QUARTERLY REPORTS
CONTAINING UNAUDITED FINANCIAL INFORMATION FOR EACH OF THE FIRST THREE QUARTERS
OF EACH FISCAL YEAR.
 
IN CONNECTION WITH THIS OFFERING, THE UNDERWRITERS MAY OVERALLOT OR EFFECT
TRANSACTIONS THAT STABILIZE OR MAINTAIN THE MARKET PRICES OF THE COMPANY'S
SECURITIES AT A LEVEL ABOVE THAT WHICH MIGHT OTHERWISE PREVAIL IN THE OPEN
MARKET. SUCH STABILIZING MAY BE EFFECTED ON THE NASDAQ NATIONAL MARKET OR
OTHERWISE. SUCH STABILIZING, IF COMMENCED, MAY BE DISCONTINUED AT ANY TIME.
<PAGE>
                               PROSPECTUS SUMMARY
 
    THE FOLLOWING SUMMARY IS QUALIFIED IN ITS ENTIRETY BY, AND SHOULD BE READ IN
CONJUNCTION  WITH, THE  MORE DETAILED  INFORMATION AND  FINANCIAL STATEMENTS AND
RELATED  NOTES  THERETO  APPEARING  ELSEWHERE  IN  THIS  PROSPECTUS.  EXCEPT  AS
OTHERWISE  NOTED, ALL INFORMATION IN THIS  PROSPECTUS ASSUMES NO EXERCISE OF THE
OVERALLOTMENT OPTION, THE WARRANTS OR THE REPRESENTATIVES' WARRANTS AND REFLECTS
(I) A 1-FOR-3.2 REVERSE SPLIT  OF THE CAPITAL STOCK  OF THE COMPANY APPROVED  BY
THE  SHAREHOLDERS ON AUGUST 9, 1996; AND  (II) THE CONVERSION OF ALL OUTSTANDING
SHARES OF SERIES A PREFERRED STOCK OF  THE COMPANY INTO AN AGGREGATE OF  859,776
SHARES  OF COMMON STOCK UPON  THE CLOSING OF THIS  OFFERING. SEE "DESCRIPTION OF
SECURITIES" AND "UNDERWRITING."
 
                                  THE COMPANY
 
    Microvision, Inc. ("Microvision" or the "Company") is developing information
display technologies that allow electronically generated images and  information
to  be projected directly onto  the retina of the  viewer's eye. The Company has
developed  prototype  virtual  retinal  display  ("VRD")  devices,  including  a
portable  monochrome  version  and  a  table-top,  full-color  version,  and  is
currently  refining   and  developing   its   VRD  technology   for   commercial
applications.  The Company expects  to commercialize its  technology through the
development of products  and as  a supplier  of personal  display technology  to
original   equipment  manufacturers  ("OEMs").  The  Company  believes  the  VRD
technology will  be useful  in  a variety  of applications,  including  portable
communication  devices, visual simulation and entertainment displays and devices
that superimpose images on the user's field of vision. The Company expects  that
its technology will permit the use of highly miniaturized, lightweight, battery-
operated,  viewing devices that  can be comfortably held  or worn as "headphones
for the eyes."
 
    Information displays are the  primary medium through  which text and  images
generated  by computer and other electronic  systems are delivered to end-users.
For decades,  the  cathode ray  tube  ("CRT")  and, more  recently,  flat  panel
displays  have  been  the dominant  display  devices.  In recent  years,  as the
computer  and  electronics   industries  have  made   substantial  advances   in
miniaturization,    manufacturers    have    sought    lightweight,   low-power,
cost-effective displays to facilitate the development of more portable products.
Flat panel technologies have made meaningful advances in these areas, and liquid
crystal flat panel displays are now commonly used for laptop computers and other
electronic products.  Both  CRT  and  flat  panel  technologies,  however,  pose
difficult  engineering  and fabrication  problems  for more  highly miniaturized
products, because of inherent constraints in size, weight and power consumption.
In addition, many products that use CRT and flat panel displays often become dim
and difficult to see  in outdoor or  other settings where  the ambient light  is
stronger than the light emitted from the screen. As display technologies attempt
to  keep pace  with miniaturization and  other advances  in information delivery
systems, the  Company  believes  that  CRT  and  flat  panel  technologies  will
experience  increasing  difficulty  providing  the  full  range  of  performance
characteristics -- high  resolution, bright  display, low  power consumption  --
required for state-of-the-art information systems.
 
    Microvision's  VRD is fundamentally different from previously commercialized
display technologies. By scanning a low  power beam of colored light to  "paint"
rows  of pixels directly  on the retina of  the viewer's eye,  the VRD creates a
high resolution,  full-motion image  without the  use of  screens or  externally
projected  images. In  certain applications, the  image appears  in the viewer's
field of vision  as if the  viewer were only  an arm's length  away from a  high
quality  video screen.  The VRD  also can superimpose  an image  on the viewer's
field of vision, enabling the viewer to see data or other information  projected
by the device in the context of his or her natural surroundings. In each case, a
high resolution, bright image is created.
 
    The  Company's objective  is to  be a  leading provider  of personal display
products and imaging technology  in a broad range  of professional and  consumer
applications.  The Company  intends to  achieve this  objective and  to generate
revenues through a combination of the following activities: technology licensing
to OEMs  of consumer  electronics products;  provision of  engineering  services
 
                                       3
<PAGE>
associated with cooperative development arrangements and research contracts; and
the  manufacture  and  sale  of high-performance  personal  display  products to
professional users, directly or through joint ventures.
 
    The Company is in  discussions with systems  and equipment manufacturers  in
the  defense,  wireless communications,  computing  and commercial  and consumer
electronics industries.  The  Company intends  to  work with  certain  of  these
manufacturers  to  develop  or  co-develop specific  products  that  the Company
believes to be the most commercially  viable. Even if the Company is  successful
in  arranging  development  or  co-development  projects,  it  does  not  expect
commercial sales of products until at  least 1998, and commercial sales may  not
occur until substantially later, if at all.
 
    The  Company's  existing  prototypes  have  demonstrated  the  technological
feasibility of the VRD and the  Company's ability to miniaturize certain of  its
key  components.  The  Company has  completed  the development  of  a mechanical
resonant scanner ("MRS"), which the  Company believes represents a  breakthrough
in  the miniaturization of  scanning devices. The Company  believes that the MRS
will permit high quality image displays using smaller devices produced at  lower
cost than is possible with current alternative technology. Additional work is in
progress to achieve full-color capability in miniaturized VRD devices, to expand
the  "exit pupil" of the VRD (which  defines the range within which the viewer's
eye can move and continue to see the image) and to design products for  specific
applications.
 
    The  VRD was  developed at  the University  of Washington's  Human Interface
Technology Lab (the "HIT Lab") by a team of engineers and technicians under  the
direction  of Thomas  A. Furness,  III, a  leader in  the development  of visual
systems. See "Management --  HIT Lab Personnel." In  1993, the Company  acquired
the  exclusive rights to the  VRD technology under a  license agreement with the
University  of  Washington   (the  "UW  License   Agreement").  Currently,   the
development  of the VRD technology is taking place  at the HIT Lab pursuant to a
research agreement  between  the  University  and  the  Company  (the  "Research
Agreement"). See "Business -- UW License Agreement." The University has received
one patent on the VRD technology and has additional patent applications pending,
all of the rights to which have been exclusively licensed to the Company.
 
    The  Company was incorporated under  the laws of the  State of Washington in
May 1993. Its  corporate offices are  located at 2203  Airport Way South,  Suite
100,  Seattle, Washington,  and its  telephone number  at that  address is (206)
623-7055.
 
                                       4
<PAGE>
                                  THE OFFERING
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                 <C>
Securities offered................  2,250,000 Units, each  Unit consisting of  one share  of
                                    Common  Stock and one  Warrant to purchase  one share of
                                    Common Stock.  The Common  Stock  and Warrants  will  be
                                    separately transferrable immediately upon issuance.
 
Common Stock to be outstanding
 after this offering..............  5,711,546 shares (1)
 
Use of proceeds...................  To  fund  research  and  product  development, including
                                    $1,604,218 to  be  paid  under  the  License  Agreement,
                                    purchase   and   installation   of   certain  laboratory
                                    equipment and facilities, repayment of up to $750,000 of
                                    the Company's 7% Convertible Subordinated Notes due 1997
                                    (the "7%  Notes"),  unless converted,  and  for  working
                                    capital. See "Use of Proceeds."
 
Risk factors......................  Investment  in the Units involves a high degree of risk.
                                    See "Risk Factors."
 
NASDAQ National Market
 symbols..........................  Common Stock ...................................... MVIS
                                    Warrants ......................................... MVISW
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Excludes (i)  1,189,168 shares  of Common  Stock issuable  upon exercise  of
    stock  options and warrants  outstanding at July 10,  1996 at an approximate
    weighted average  exercise price  of $5.28  per share;  (ii) up  to  135,000
    shares   of  Common  Stock  issuable   in  connection  with  conversions  or
    redemptions of the Company's 7% Notes; (iii) 356,150 shares of Common  Stock
    issuable  upon exercise of the Representatives' Warrants; (iv) 12,000 shares
    of Common Stock reserved for issuance to Stoel Rives LLP, as a result of its
    receipt of  Units as  partial payment  for legal  services rendered  to  the
    Company in connection with this offering (the "Stoel Rives Shares"); and (v)
    the  cash redemption of a nominal number of fractional shares resulting from
    the reverse stock split approved by  the shareholders on August 9, 1996.  An
    additional  825,000 shares of  Common Stock are  reserved for issuance under
    the Company's 1996 Stock  Option Plan and  1996 Independent Directors  Stock
    Plan  (the  "1996 Stock  Plans").  See "Capitalization"  and  "Management --
    Benefit Plans."
 
                                       5
<PAGE>
                         SUMMARY FINANCIAL INFORMATION
 
    The following table presents summary historical financial information of the
Company. The financial information  as of and for  the years ended December  31,
1994  and  1995 has  been  derived from  financial  statements audited  by Price
Waterhouse LLP, independent accountants. The audited balance sheets at  December
31, 1994 and 1995 and the related statements of operations, of cash flows and of
changes  in shareholders' equity (deficit) for  the two years ended December 31,
1995 and notes thereto (the "Audited Financial Statements") appear elsewhere  in
this  Prospectus. The report of Price Waterhouse LLP, which also appears herein,
contains an explanatory paragraph relating to the Company's ability to  continue
as  a  going concern.  See  Note 1  of Notes  to  the Financial  Statements. The
financial information presented as of June  30, 1996, for the six month  periods
ended  June 30, 1995 and 1996, and for the period cumulative from inception (May
1993) to June 30, 1996, has been derived from unaudited financial statements  of
the  Company  (the  "Unaudited  Financial Statements,"  and,  together  with the
Audited Financial Statements,  the "Financial  Statements"). In  the opinion  of
management,  the Unaudited Financial  Statements have been  prepared on the same
basis  as  the  Audited  Financial  Statements  and  include  all   adjustments,
consisting  only of normal recurring adjustments, that management of the Company
considers necessary for  a fair presentation  of the results  of operations  and
financial  position for such periods. The results  for the six months ended June
30, 1996 are not necessarily indicative of the results that may be expected  for
any  other  interim  period  or  for  the  full  year.  This  summary  financial
information should  be read  in conjunction  with the  Financial Statements  and
other financial information included elsewhere in this Prospectus.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                   PERIOD FROM
                                                        YEAR ENDED            SIX MONTHS ENDED      INCEPTION
                                                --------------------------  --------------------  (MAY 1993) TO
                                                DECEMBER 31,  DECEMBER 31,  JUNE 30,   JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,
                                                    1994          1995        1995       1996         1996
                                                ------------  ------------  ---------  ---------  -------------
                                                             (IN THOUSANDS, EXCEPT PER SHARE DATA)
<S>                                             <C>           <C>           <C>        <C>        <C>
STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS DATA:
Contract revenue..............................   $   --        $       29   $  --      $      27    $      56
Operating expenses:
  Research and development....................        1,805         1,931         700        692        5,575
  Marketing, general and administrative.......        1,046         1,038         408        670        2,970
                                                ------------  ------------  ---------  ---------  -------------
      Total expenses..........................        2,851         2,969       1,108      1,362        8,545
Net loss......................................   $   (2,812)   $   (2,944)  $  (1,099) $  (1,332)   $  (8,439)
Pro forma net loss per share (3)(4)...........                 $    (0.63)  $   (0.24) $   (0.28)
Shares used in pro forma net loss per share
 calculations.................................                      4,677       4,587      4,767
</TABLE>
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                              AS OF DECEMBER 31,                AS OF JUNE 30, 1996
                                                                                   ---------------------------------------------
                                                             --------------------                                   PRO FORMA
                                                               1994       1995       ACTUAL      PRO FORMA (1)   AS ADJUSTED (2)
                                                             ---------  ---------  -----------  ---------------  ---------------
                                                                                       (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                          <C>        <C>        <C>          <C>              <C>
BALANCE SHEET DATA:
Cash and cash equivalents..................................  $      68  $      99   $     462      $   1,170        $  16,913
Working capital............................................        (30)      (376)       (251)          (251)          15,492
Total assets...............................................        138        179         629          1,379           17,122
Total shareholders' equity (deficit).......................        (10)      (365)       (144)          (144)          15,599
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------------
(1)  Gives  effect  to  the  issuance of  the  7%  Notes.  See "Capitalization,"
    "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results  of
    Operations  -- Liquidity and Capital  Resources," "Certain Transactions" and
    Note 8 of Notes to the Financial Statements.
 
(2) Adjusted  to reflect  the sale  of the  Units offered  hereby, assuming  the
    receipt  of the net proceeds estimated to  be 15,743,000 and no repayment of
    the 7% Notes  out of the  proceeds of the  offering. Excludes (i)  1,189,168
    shares  of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of stock options and warrants
    outstanding at July  10, 1996  at an approximate  weighted average  exercise
    price of $5.28 per share; (ii) up to 135,000 shares of Common Stock issuable
    in  connection with  conversions or redemptions  of the  Company's 7% Notes;
    (iii)  356,150  shares  of  Common  Stock  issuable  upon  exercise  of  the
    Representatives'  Warrant; (iv)  the Stoel  Rives Shares;  and (v)  the cash
    redemption of  a nominal  number  of fractional  shares resulting  from  the
    reverse  stock  split approved  by the  shareholders on  August 9,  1996. An
    additional 825,000 shares of  Common Stock are  reserved for issuance  under
    the  Company's  1996 Stock  Plans. See  "Capitalization" and  "Management --
    Benefit Plans."
 
(3) Pro forma net loss per share is computed after giving retroactive effect  to
    the  conversion of  all shares  of Series  A Preferred  Stock into  an equal
    number of shares of Common Stock,  which will occur upon completion of  this
    offering.
 
(4)  Supplemental earnings per share reflecting  the use of offering proceeds to
    repay the 7%  Notes is  not provided  due to the  issuance of  the 7%  Notes
    subsequent to June 30, 1996.
 
                                       6
<PAGE>
                                  RISK FACTORS
 
    THE  INFORMATION  SET  FORTH  IN "MANAGEMENT'S  DISCUSSION  AND  ANALYSIS OF
FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS," "USE OF PROCEEDS" AND "BUSINESS"
AND ELSEWHERE  IN THIS  PROSPECTUS INCLUDES  CERTAIN FORWARD-LOOKING  STATEMENTS
WITHIN  THE MEANING OF SECTION 27A OF THE  SECURITIES ACT AND SECTION 21E OF THE
EXCHANGE ACT. ACTUAL RESULTS COULD DIFFER MATERIALLY FROM THOSE PROJECTED IN THE
FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AS A RESULT OF CERTAIN OF THE RISK FACTORS SET  FORTH
BELOW AND INFORMATION APPEARING ELSEWHERE IN THIS PROSPECTUS. IN ADDITION TO THE
OTHER  INFORMATION  CONTAINED  IN THIS  PROSPECTUS,  INVESTORS  SHOULD CAREFULLY
CONSIDER THE FOLLOWING RISK FACTORS:
 
    MARKET ACCEPTANCE OF NEW TECHNOLOGY.   The Company's success will depend  on
successful  development and commercial  acceptance of the  VRD technology, a new
technology which permits  users to view  images and  data without the  use of  a
screen  by projecting an image directly onto  the retina of the viewer's eye. To
achieve commercial  success, this  technology  and products  incorporating  this
technology   must  be  accepted  by  OEMs  and  end-users,  and  must  meet  the
expectations of a continually  changing marketplace. There  can be no  assurance
that  the  VRD technology  will achieve  any measure  of market  acceptance. See
"Business."
 
    EARLY STAGE  OF PRODUCT  DEVELOPMENT.   Although the  Company has  developed
prototype  VRD displays, further research,  development and testing is necessary
before any  products will  be available  for commercial  sale. There  can be  no
assurance  that  the Company  will  be successful  in  further refining  the VRD
technology  to  produce  marketable  products.   In  addition,  delays  in   the
development of products, or the inability of the Company to procure partners for
the  development  of products,  may delay  the introduction  of, or  prevent the
Company from introducing, products to  the marketplace and adversely affect  the
Company's  competitive position, financial condition  and results of operations.
See "Business."
 
    DEVELOPMENT  STAGE  ENTERPRISE;   EXPECTATION  OF   LOSSES;  NEGATIVE   CASH
FLOWS.    The  Company was  founded  in May  1993  and, as  a  development stage
enterprise, has not yet generated revenues from product sales. The Company  does
not  expect to generate significant revenues in  the near future. As of June 30,
1996, the Company had an accumulated deficit since inception of $8,439,200,  and
the  Company expects to  continue to incur substantial  losses and negative cash
flow at  least  through  mid-1998  and possibly  thereafter.  There  can  be  no
assurance  that the Company will become profitable  or cash flow positive at any
time in the future. Because the Company has experienced significant losses  from
operations,  the Company's ability to continue  as a going concern is uncertain.
The likelihood of the success of the Company must be considered in light of  the
expenses,  difficulties, and delays frequently  encountered by businesses formed
to  pursue  development  of  new  technologies.  In  particular,  the  Company's
operations to date have focused primarily on research and development of the VRD
technology  and prototypes  and the Company  has only recently  begun to develop
marketing capabilities. It is not possible to estimate future operating expenses
and revenues based upon historical  performance. Operating results will  depend,
in  part, on matters over  which the Company has  no control, including, without
limitation, general economic conditions, technological and other developments in
the electronics,  computing, information  display  and imaging  industries,  and
competition.  See "Management's  Discussion and Analysis  of Financial Condition
and Results of Operations."
 
    LOSS OF EXCLUSIVE LICENSE; DEPENDENCE ON THE UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON.   The
Company's success depends on technology that it has licensed from the University
of  Washington. The Company  relies on the University  of Washington to prepare,
file and  prosecute  patent applications  relating  to the  VRD  technology.  In
addition,  the University of Washington's HIT  Lab currently performs all of the
Company's research and development  activities under the  terms of the  Research
Agreement  and the UW License Agreement. The Company does not currently have the
personnel or  equipment  to  carry  out research  and  development  of  the  VRD
technology on its own. If the University of Washington were to violate the terms
of  the Research Agreement or the UW License Agreement, the Company's operations
and business prospects could be materially and adversely affected. In  addition,
if the Company
 
                                       7
<PAGE>
were  to breach certain  of the terms  of the UW  License Agreement, the Company
could lose the exclusivity of its  license or, under certain circumstances,  all
license rights to the VRD technology. See "Business -- UW License Agreement."
 
    PATENTS  AND PROTECTION OF PROPRIETARY TECHNOLOGY.  The Company's ability to
compete effectively in the information display  market will depend, in part,  on
the  ability of  the Company  and the University  of Washington  to maintain the
proprietary nature of the VRD technology. The University of Washington has  been
awarded  one  U.S. patent  relating to  the VRD  technology. Patent  No. 5467104
issued in November 1995 has 11 claims, including claims directed to the  ability
to  superimpose images on  the user's field  of vision. The  University also has
received notices of  allowance from the  U.S. Patent and  Trademark Office  with
respect to certain claims under a second and a third U.S. patent application. In
addition,  the University has filed  applications for several additional patents
in the  United  States  and  in  certain foreign  countries.  There  can  be  no
assurance,  however, as to the degree of protection offered by these patents, or
as to  the  likelihood that  patents  will be  issued  from the  pending  patent
applications.  Moreover, these patents may have  limited commercial value or may
lack sufficient  breadth to  protect  adequately the  aspects of  the  Company's
technology to which the patents relate.
 
    There  can be  no assurance  that competitors, in  the United  States and in
foreign countries, many of which  have substantially greater resources than  the
Company  and have made  substantial investments in  competing technologies, will
not apply for and obtain patents that will prevent, limit or interfere with  the
Company's ability to make and sell its products. The Company is aware of several
patents held by third parties that relate to certain aspects of retinal scanning
devices.  There is no assurance that these patents  would not be used as a basis
to challenge the validity of the University's patent rights, to limit the  scope
of the University's patent rights or to limit the University's ability to obtain
additional  or broader patent rights. A  successful challenge to the validity of
the University's patents may adversely affect the Company's competitive position
and could  limit the  Company's  ability to  commercialize the  VRD  technology.
Moreover,  there can  be no  assurance that such  patent holders  or other third
parties will not  claim infringement by  the Company or  by the University  with
respect  to current and future technology.  Because U.S. patent applications are
held and examined in  secrecy, it is also  possible that presently pending  U.S.
applications  will eventually  issue with claims  that will be  infringed by the
Company's products or the VRD technology. The defense and prosecution of  patent
suits  is costly and time-consuming,  even if the outcome  is favorable. This is
particularly true in foreign countries  where the expenses associated with  such
proceedings  can be prohibitive. An  adverse outcome in the  defense of a patent
suit could  subject the  Company to  significant liabilities  to third  parties,
require  the Company and  others to cease selling  products that incorporate VRD
technology or cease licensing the VRD technology, or require disputed rights  to
be  licensed  from  third  parties.  Such  licenses  may  not  be  available  on
satisfactory terms, or at all. Moreover, if claims of infringement are  asserted
against  future  co-development  partners  or customers  of  the  Company, those
partners or customers may seek indemnification  from the Company for damages  or
expenses they incur.
 
    The  Company also relies on unpatented proprietary technology. Third parties
could develop the same or similar  technology or otherwise obtain access to  the
Company's  proprietary technology.  To protect  its rights  in these  areas, the
Company requires all employees and most consultants, advisors and  collaborators
to  enter into  confidentiality and noncompetition  agreements. There  can be no
assurance, however, that these agreements will provide meaningful protection for
the Company's trade secrets,  know-how or other  proprietary information in  the
event  of any  unauthorized use,  misappropriation or  disclosure of  such trade
secrets, know-how or other proprietary information. To date, the Company has had
no experience in  enforcing such  confidentiality agreements.  In addition,  the
University  of Washington retains the right to publish information regarding the
VRD technology for academic purposes. See "Business -- Intellectual Property and
Proprietary Rights."
 
    DEPENDENCE ON  FUTURE  COLLABORATIONS; DEPENDENCE  ON  THIRD PARTIES.    The
Company's    strategy   for   the    development,   testing,   manufacture   and
commercialization of  the  VRD technology  and  products incorporating  the  VRD
technology  includes  entering into  cooperative  development, joint  venture or
licensing arrangements with corporate  partners, OEMs, licensors, licensees  and
others. There can
 
                                       8
<PAGE>
be  no assurance that the Company will be able to negotiate such arrangements on
acceptable terms, if  at all, or  that such arrangements  will be successful  in
yielding  commercially viable products. If the  Company is not able to establish
such arrangements, it would require additional working capital to undertake such
activities at  its  own  expense  and  would  require  extensive  manufacturing,
marketing  and sales expertise that it  does not currently possess. In addition,
the Company could encounter significant delays in introducing the VRD technology
into certain  markets or  find  that the  development,  manufacture or  sale  of
products  incorporating the VRD technology in such markets would not be feasible
without, or would be adversely affected  by the absence of, such agreements.  To
the  extent  the  Company enters  into  cooperative development  or  other joint
venture or licensing  arrangements, the  revenues received by  the Company  will
depend  upon the efforts  of third parties,  and there can  be no assurance that
such parties  will  put  forth  such  efforts  or  that  such  efforts  will  be
successful. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and
Results of Operations" and "Business -- Strategy."
 
    COMPETITION AND TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCES.  The information display industry is
highly  competitive.  The  Company's products  and  the VRD  technology  will be
competing with  established manufacturers  of miniaturized  CRT and  flat  panel
display  devices,  including  companies  such  as  Sony  Corporation  and  Texas
Instruments Incorporated,  most of  whom have  substantially greater  financial,
technical  and other resources than the Company  and many of whom are developing
alternative miniature display technologies. The  Company also will compete  with
other developers of miniaturized display devices. There can be no assurance that
the  Company's competitors  will not  succeed in  developing information display
technologies and products that would render the VRD technology or the  Company's
proposed products obsolete. The electronic information display industry has been
characterized  by rapid and significant technological  advances. There can be no
assurance that the VRD technology or the Company's proposed products will remain
competitive with such advances or that the Company will have sufficient funds to
invest in new technologies or processes. See "Business -- Competition."
 
    LACK OF MANUFACTURING EXPERIENCE.  In order for the Company to be successful
as a product  or component manufacturer,  its products must  be manufactured  to
meet  high quality standards in commercial quantities at competitive prices. The
Company currently  has  no  capability to  manufacture  products  in  commercial
quantities.  The Company has only  produced prototypes for research, development
and demonstration purposes. Accordingly, the Company must obtain access  through
partners  or contract manufacturers to  manufacturing capacity and processes for
the production of its future products,  if any, in commercial quantities,  which
will  require extensive lead  time. There can  be no assurance  that the Company
will successfully obtain access to these resources. See "Business -- Strategy."
 
    CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS.  The  Company believes that the  net proceeds of  this
offering,  combined with cash on  hand, will be sufficient  to fund its budgeted
capital and operating requirements for at  least the next twelve months.  Actual
expenses,  however, may exceed the amount  budgeted therefor and the Company may
require  additional   capital  to   fund  long-term   operations  and   business
development.  The Company's  capital requirements  will depend  on many factors,
including, but not limited to, the rate at which the Company can develop the VRD
technology,  its  ability  to  attract  partners  for  product  development  and
licensing  arrangements, and the  market acceptance and  competitive position of
products that incorporate the VRD technology. There can be no assurance that the
Company will be  able to  obtain financing,  or that, if  it is  able to  obtain
financing,  it will be able to do so on satisfactory terms or on a timely basis.
If additional funds are raised through the issuance of equity, convertible  debt
or  similar securities, shareholders may experience additional dilution and such
securities may have rights or preferences  senior to those of the Common  Stock.
Moreover,  if  adequate  funds  were  not  available  to  satisfy  the Company's
short-term or long-term capital requirements,  the Company would be required  to
limit its operations significantly. See "Management's Discussion and Analysis of
Financial   Condition  and  Results  of  Operations  --  Liquidity  and  Capital
Resources."
 
                                       9
<PAGE>
    CONTROL BY EXISTING SHAREHOLDERS.   Upon the closing  of this offering,  the
Company's  existing  shareholders will  own approximately  61% of  the Company's
outstanding shares of Common Stock. The Company's executive officers,  directors
and  five-percent  shareholders  and  their  affiliates  will  beneficially  own
approximately 8.0% of the  Company's outstanding shares  of Common Stock.  These
shareholders,  if they were to act as a group, would be able to elect all of the
Company's directors, and  otherwise control  matters requiring  approval by  the
shareholders  of  the  Company,  including  approval  of  significant  corporate
transactions. Such concentration of ownership and the lack of cumulative  voting
also  may have the effect  of delaying or preventing a  change in control of the
Company. See "Principal Shareholders."
 
    DEPENDENCE ON KEY PERSONNEL.  The Company's success is dependent on  certain
key  management personnel, including Richard F. Rutkowski and Stephen R. Willey,
the loss of  whose services  could significantly  delay the  achievement of  the
Company's  planned development objectives. Achievement of the Company's business
objectives will  require  substantial  additional  expertise  in  the  areas  of
technology,  finance,  manufacturing  and  marketing.  The  Company  is actively
seeking additional  qualified  full-time personnel.  Competition  for  qualified
personnel is intense, and the loss of key personnel, or the inability to attract
and retain the additional highly skilled personnel required for the expansion of
the  Company's activities, could have a material adverse effect on the Company's
business  and  results   of  operations.   See  "Business   --  Employees"   and
"Management."
 
    POSSIBILITY OF FUTURE REGULATION.  The Company is not aware of any health or
safety regulations applicable to VRD products, other than regulations related to
labeling  of  devices  that emit  electro-magnetic  radiation. There  can  be no
assurance,  however,  that  new  health  and  safety  regulations  will  not  be
promulgated  that might materially and adversely affect the Company's ability to
commercialize the VRD technology. See "Business -- Human Factors and Safety."
 
    POSSIBLE ILLIQUIDITY OF TRADING MARKET.   Prior to this offering, there  has
been  no public market for the Company's Common Stock or Warrants, and there can
be no assurance that an  active public market for  the Common Stock or  Warrants
will  develop or be sustained after this offering. The Common Stock and Warrants
have been approved for  listing on the Nasdaq  National Market. To maintain  the
listing  of the  Common Stock  and Warrants on  the Nasdaq  National Market, the
Company must continue to satisfy  certain maintenance standards. If the  Company
is  unable  to maintain  the  standards for  continued  quotation on  the Nasdaq
National Market, the Common Stock and  the Warrants could be subject to  removal
from  the Nasdaq National Market.  Trading, if any, in  the Common Stock and the
Warrants would  thereafter be  conducted in  the over-the-counter  market on  an
electronic bulletin board established for securities that do not meet the Nasdaq
National  Market listing requirements or in what are commonly referred to as the
"pink sheets." As a result, an investor would find it more difficult to  dispose
of,  or  to  obtain  accurate  quotations  as  to  the  price  of  the Company's
securities. In  addition, depending  on several  factors, including  the  future
market  price of the Common Stock, the Company's securities could become subject
to the so-called "penny stock" rules  that impose additional sales practice  and
market  making requirements on broker-dealers  who sell or make  a market in the
Company's securities and diminish the  ability of the Company's shareholders  to
sell their securities in the secondary market.
 
    POSSIBLE VOLATILITY OF COMMON STOCK PRICE.  The Unit Offering Price has been
determined  by negotiation between  the Company and  the Representatives and may
not  be  indicative  of  future  market  prices.  Factors  considered  in  these
negotiations,  in addition to prevailing market conditions, included the history
and prospects  of the  industry in  which  the Company  intends to  compete,  an
assessment  of the  Company's management,  prospects and  capital structure, and
such other factors as the Representatives  and the Company deemed relevant.  The
trading  price of the  Company's Common Stock  and Warrants could  be subject to
significant  fluctuations  in  response  to  such  factors  as,  among   others,
variations  in  the  Company's  anticipated  or  actual  results  of operations,
announcements  of  products  utilizing  the  VRD  technology  or   technological
innovations  by the Company  or its competitors. Moreover,  the stock market has
from time to time experienced extreme  price and volume fluctuations which  have
particularly  affected  the  market  prices for  emerging  growth  companies and
 
                                       10
<PAGE>
which often have been unrelated to the operating performance of such  companies.
These  broad market  fluctuations may adversely  affect the market  price of the
Company's  Common  Stock  and  Warrants.  In  the  past,  following  periods  of
volatility  in the market price of a company's securities, class action lawsuits
have been  filed  against the  company.  There can  be  no assurance  that  such
litigation  will  not occur  in the  future  with respect  to the  Company. Such
litigation could result  in substantial  costs and a  diversion of  management's
attention  and  resources, which  could have  a material  adverse effect  on the
Company's business and results of operations. Any adverse determination in  such
litigation also could subject the Company to significant liabilities.
 
    SHARES  ELIGIBLE  FOR FUTURE  SALE.   Sales  of  substantial amounts  of the
Company's Common Stock in the public market following the offering may adversely
affect, and even the potential for  such sales may adversely affect, the  market
price  of the Company's Common Stock. In  addition to the shares of Common Stock
included in the  Units offered hereby  and the shares  of Common Stock  issuable
upon exercise of the Warrants included in the Units offered hereby and the Stoel
Rives  Shares, an additional 210,000 shares of Common Stock are being registered
under the Registration Statement of which this Prospectus is a part and will  be
eligible for resale by the holders of such securities, or securities convertible
into such securities, without restriction under the Securities Act 90 days after
the  date of this Prospectus. Commencing  approximately 12 months after the date
of this Prospectus, up to 356,150 shares of Common Stock that are issuable  upon
exercise  of the Representatives'  Warrants (including exercise  of the warrants
included therein)  will be  eligible for  resale without  restriction under  the
Securities Act. The remaining 3,386,546 shares of Common Stock outstanding as of
the date of this Prospectus will become eligible for sale at various times after
the  date  hereof.  Following  this  offering, the  Company  intends  to  file a
registration statement  under  the  Securities  Act  to  register  approximately
825,000  shares reserved for  issuance under the Company's  1996 Stock Plans and
724,017 shares issuable  upon exercise  of options granted  under the  Company's
prior  stock option  plans. See "Management  -- Benefit  Plans," "Description of
Securities," "Shares Eligible for Future Sale" and "Underwriting."
 
    REDEMPTION OF WARRANTS.   As described in greater  detail elsewhere in  this
Prospectus,  outstanding Warrants are subject to redemption at $0.25 per Warrant
on 30 days  written notice provided  that the  closing bid price  of the  Common
Stock  has been at least 200% of the  exercise price of the Warrants for each of
the 20 consecutive trading days immediately preceding the date of the notice  of
redemption. In the event the Company exercises the right to redeem the Warrants,
a  holder will be forced either to exercise the Warrant or accept the redemption
price. See "Description of Securities -- Warrants."
 
    POTENTIAL EFFECT  OF  ANTI-TAKEOVER  PROVISIONS.    The  Company's  Restated
Articles  of Incorporation (the "Articles  of Incorporation") give the Company's
Board of Directors the authority to issue, and to fix the rights and preferences
of, shares  of the  Company's Preferred  Stock,  which may  have the  effect  of
delaying,  deterring or  preventing a change  in control of  the Company without
action by the Company's shareholders. Furthermore, the Articles of Incorporation
provide that  the written  demand at  least  25% of  the outstanding  shares  is
required  to call  a special meeting  of the shareholders.  In addition, certain
provisions of Washington  law could have  the effect of  delaying, deterring  or
preventing a change in control of the Company. See "Description of Capital Stock
- -- Preferred Stock" and "-- Washington Anti-Takeover Statute."
 
    CURRENT  PROSPECTUS AND STATE BLUE SKY REGISTRATION REQUIRED TO EXERCISE THE
WARRANTS.  Purchasers of  Units will be able  to exercise the Warrants  included
therein  only if  a current prospectus  relating to the  Common Stock underlying
such Warrants is then in effect, and only if such Common Stock is qualified  for
sale  or exempt from qualification under applicable state securities laws of the
states in which such  holders of the Warrants  reside. Although the Company  has
undertaken  to maintain the  effectiveness of a  current prospectus covering the
Common Stock underlying the Warrants, there can be no assurance that the Company
will be able to do so.  The value of the Warrants  may be impaired if a  current
prospectus  covering the Common Stock issuable  upon exercise of the Warrants is
not kept effective,  or if such  Common Stock  is not qualified  or exempt  from
qualification in the states in which the holders of Warrants reside.
 
                                       11
<PAGE>
    The Warrants are separately transferable immediately upon issuance. Although
the Units will not knowingly be sold to purchasers in jurisdictions in which the
Units  are not  registered or otherwise  qualified for sale,  purchasers may buy
Warrants in the  after market in,  or may  move to, jurisdictions  in which  the
shares  underlying the  Warrants are not  so registered or  qualified during the
period that the Warrants  are exercisable. In this  event, the Company would  be
unable to issue shares to those persons desiring to exercise their Warrants, and
holders  of Warrants would have no choice but to attempt to sell the Warrants in
a  jurisdiction  where  such  sale  is  permissible  or  allow  them  to  expire
unexercised. See "Description of Securities -- Warrants."
 
    DILUTION.    Purchasers  of  the Common  Stock  offered  hereby  will suffer
immediate and substantial dilution in the net tangible book value of the  Common
Stock  from the  Unit Offering  Price. Certain events,  such as  the issuance of
Common Stock pursuant to the exercise of outstanding warrants and stock options,
or upon conversion  or redemption of  the 7% Notes,  could result in  additional
dilution.  See "Dilution," "Management  -- Benefit Plans,"  "Shares Eligible for
Future Sale" and "Underwriting."
 
                                USE OF PROCEEDS
 
    The net  proceeds  of  this  offering  are  estimated  to  be  approximately
$15,743,000  (approximately $18,443,000 if the Overallotment Option is exercised
in full).
 
    The Company  intends to  use the  net proceeds  from this  offering to  fund
research  and product  development, including  $1,604,218 to  be paid  under the
License Agreement, the purchase and installation of certain laboratory equipment
and facilities, the repayment of up to $750,000 in aggregate principal amount of
its 7% Notes due July 10, 1997,  unless converted, and for working capital.  The
amounts actually expended for each purpose may vary significantly depending upon
various  factors, including the  progress of the  Company's research and product
development programs, determinations as to  the commercial potential of each  of
the  Company's  anticipated products,  the  Company's ability  to  attract third
parties to  co-fund  the research  and  development  of, or  to  purchase,  such
products  and the aggregate  principal amount of the  7% Notes outstanding after
completion of this offering. Pending such use, the net proceeds will be invested
in short-term, investment grade, interest-bearing securities or interest-bearing
accounts. The net proceeds from the 7% Notes, approximately $707,500, were  used
to  fund operating expenses, fees and certain expenses related to this offering,
and to make a  payment of approximately $320,800  under the Research  Agreement.
The  Company believes  that the net  proceeds from this  offering, combined with
cash on  hand,  will  be  sufficient to  fund  budgeted  capital  and  operating
requirements  for at least the next  twelve months. See "Management's Discussion
and Analysis of Financial Condition and  Results of Operations -- Liquidity  and
Capital Resources."
 
                                DIVIDEND POLICY
 
    The  Company has  not paid cash  dividends since its  inception. The Company
currently intends to retain all of its earnings, if any, for use in its business
and does not anticipate paying any cash dividends in the foreseeable future. The
payment of dividends  is subject  to the discretion  of the  Company's Board  of
Directors.
 
                                       12
<PAGE>
                                 CAPITALIZATION
 
    The  following table sets forth the capitalization of the Company as of June
30, 1996; the pro forma capitalization of the Company as of June 30, 1996 giving
effect to (i) the conversion of 859,776 shares of Series A Preferred Stock  into
an  equal number of shares of Common Stock  (ii) the issuance of the 7% Notes in
July 1996; and the pro  forma capitalization as adjusted  to give effect to  the
issuance  of 2,250,000 Units and receipt of the net proceeds therefrom. See Note
8 of Notes to the Financial Statements.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                         JUNE 30, 1996 (1)
                                                                                -----------------------------------
<S>                                                                             <C>        <C>          <C>
                                                                                                         PRO FORMA
                                                                                 ACTUAL     PRO FORMA   AS ADJUSTED
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
 
<CAPTION>
                                                                                          (IN THOUSANDS)
<S>                                                                             <C>        <C>          <C>
7% Convertible Subordinated Notes due 1997 (current)..........................     --       $     750    $     750
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
Shareholders' equity
  Series A Preferred Stock, no par value, 31,250,000 shares authorized,
   859,776, none and none issued and outstanding..............................  $   3,533   $  --        $  --
  Common Stock, no par value, 31,250,000 shares authorized, 2,601,770,
   3,461,546 and 5,711,546 shares issued and outstanding......................      4,794       8,327       24,070
  Deferred compensation.......................................................        (21)        (21)         (21)
  Subscription receivable.....................................................        (10)        (10)         (10)
  Accumulated deficit.........................................................     (8,440)     (8,440)      (8,440)
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
    Total shareholders' equity................................................       (144)       (144)      15,599
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
  Total capitalization........................................................  $    (144)  $    (144)   $  15,599
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
                                                                                ---------  -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Excludes  (i) 1,189,168  of Common  Stock issuable  upon exercise  of  stock
    options and warrants outstanding at July 10, 1996 at an approximate weighted
    average  exercise price  of $5.28  per share; (ii)  up to  135,000 shares of
    Common Stock issuable in connection  with conversions or redemptions of  the
    7% Notes; (iii) 356,150 shares of Common Stock issuable upon exercise of the
    Representatives'  Warrants; (iv)  the Stoel Rives  Shares; and  (v) the cash
    redemption of  a nominal  number  of fractional  shares resulting  from  the
    reverse  stock  split approved  by the  shareholders on  August 9,  1996. An
    additional 825,000 shares of  Common Stock are  reserved for issuance  under
    the Company's 1996 Stock Plans. See "Management -- Benefit Plans."
 
                                       13
<PAGE>
                                    DILUTION
 
    The  pro  forma  net  tangible  book value  of  the  Company,  prior  to any
adjustments, as of June 30, 1996 was $(144,000), or $(0.04) per share. Pro forma
net tangible book value per share represents the amount of total tangible assets
of the Company reduced by  the amount of its  total liabilities, divided by  the
total  number  of  shares of  Common  Stock  after conversion  of  the  Series A
Preferred Stock to Common Stock.
 
    Pro forma  net  tangible  book  value  dilution  per  share  represents  the
difference between the amount per share paid by new investors who purchase Units
in  this offering and the pro forma net  tangible book value per share of Common
Stock immediately after completion of this offering. After giving effect to  the
sale  by the Company of 2,250,000 Units in  this offering and the receipt of the
estimated  proceeds  therefrom  (after   deduction  of  estimated   underwriting
discounts  and offering expenses  and attributing no  portion of the  value of a
Unit to a Warrant), the pro forma net  tangible book value of the Company as  of
June  30, 1996  would have been  approximately $15,599,000, or  $2.73 per share.
This represents an immediate  increase in pro forma  net tangible book value  of
$2.77  per share to existing shareholders and an immediate dilution in pro forma
net tangible book value of $5.27 per share to new investors purchasing Units  in
this offering, as illustrated in the following table:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                                                           <C>        <C>
Assumed initial public offering price per share.............................             $    8.00
  Pro forma net tangible book value per share at June 30, 1996..............  $   (0.04)
  Increase per share attributable to new investors..........................       2.77
                                                                              ---------
Pro forma net tangible book value per share after this offering.............                  2.73
Pro forma net tangible book value dilution per share to new investors.......             $    5.27
                                                                                         ---------
                                                                                         ---------
</TABLE>
 
    The  following table summarizes, on a pro forma basis as of July 10, 1996 to
reflect the same  adjustments described above,  the number of  shares of  Common
Stock  purchased from the Company, the  total consideration paid and the average
price per share paid by (i) the  existing holders of Common Stock; and (ii)  the
new  investors in  this offering,  assuming the sale  of 2,250,000  Units by the
Company. The calculations are  based upon total consideration  given by new  and
existing shareholders.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         SHARES PURCHASED             TOTAL CONSIDERATION          AVERAGE
                                                    ---------------------------  ------------------------------     PRICE
                                                       NUMBER        PERCENT          AMOUNT         PERCENT      PER SHARE
                                                    -------------  ------------  ----------------  ------------  -----------
<S>                                                 <C>            <C>           <C>               <C>           <C>
Existing shareholders.............................      3,461,546          61%   $      7,777,528          30%    $    2.25
New investors.....................................      2,250,000          39%         18,000,000          70%    $    8.00
                                                    -------------         ---    ----------------         ---
    TOTAL.........................................      5,711,546         100%   $     25,777,528         100%
                                                    -------------         ---    ----------------         ---
                                                    -------------         ---    ----------------         ---
</TABLE>
 
    The above computations exclude (i) 1,189,168 shares of Common Stock issuable
upon  exercise of stock options and warrants  outstanding at July 10, 1996 at an
approximate weighted  average exercise  price of  $5.28 per  share; (ii)  up  to
135,000  shares  of  Common Stock  issuable  in connection  with  conversions or
redemptions of the  Company's 7%  Notes; (iii)  356,150 shares  of Common  Stock
issuable  upon exercise of  the Representatives' Warrants;  (iv) the Stoel Rives
Shares; and (v)  the cash redemption  of a nominal  number of fractional  shares
resulting from the reverse stock split approved by the shareholders on August 9,
1996.  An additional  825,000 shares of  Common Stock are  reserved for issuance
under the  Company's  1996 Stock  Plans.  To  the extent  that  any  outstanding
warrants  and options are exercised, including the Representatives' Warrants, or
the 7% Notes are converted or  redeemed, or additional shares are issued,  there
will  be further  dilution to  investors in  this offering.  See "Description of
Securities," "Certain  Transactions,"  "Management --  Benefit  Plans,"  "Shares
Eligible for Future Sale" and "Underwriting."
 
                                       14
<PAGE>
               MANAGEMENT'S DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS OF FINANCIAL
                      CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
OVERVIEW
 
    The  Company commenced operations  in May 1993  to develop and commercialize
technology for displaying images and information directly onto the retina of the
eye. Since its formation,  the Company has been  in the development stage,  with
its  principal  activities consisting  of assembling  a qualified  technical and
executive management team, working  with the HIT Lab  in the development of  the
VRD  technology  and prototype  products and  raising  capital. The  Company has
generated no significant revenues and has incurred substantial losses since  its
inception. The Company expects to continue to incur significant operating losses
over the next several years.
 
    The  Company expects revenues to be derived from licensing its technology to
OEMs of consumer electronic products; providing engineering services  associated
with cooperative development arrangements, including research contracts; and the
manufacturing  and sale of high-performance personal display products to certain
professional users, directly  or through  joint ventures. The  Company does  not
expect  to  have  any significant  revenues  until  late 1997  at  the earliest.
Revenues in  late 1997,  if any,  are expected  to be  derived from  cooperative
development  projects.  Revenues  from sales  of  products may  not  occur until
substantially later,  if  at  all.  The  Company  expects  to  continue  funding
prototype   and  demonstration  versions  of   products  incorporating  the  VRD
technology throughout 1996 and 1997. Future revenues, profits and cash flow will
depend on  acceptance of  the VRD  technology by  various industries  and  OEMs,
market acceptance of products incorporating the VRD technology and the technical
performance of such products. Additionally, the Company must be able to attract,
retain  and  motivate  qualified  technical and  management  personnel  and both
anticipate and adapt to a  rapidly changing, competitive market for  information
display technologies. See "Risk Factors."
 
PLAN OF OPERATION
 
    The  Company intends to invest over the  next year in ongoing innovation and
improvements to  the  VRD technology,  including  the development  of  component
technology  and prototypes as well as the design of subsystems and products. The
Company intends that soon after the completion of this offering it will purchase
and install certain laboratory equipment and facilities in support of this work.
The Company also intends to continue to add to its technical and business  staff
in  pursuit  of  its technology  development  and marketing  objectives  and, in
particular,  intends  to  augment  substantially  its  engineering  staff.   The
operating  plan also provides for the  completion of the Research Agreement with
the University of Washington and the development of strategic relationships with
systems and equipment manufacturers.
 
RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
 
    The  Company  is  in  the  development  stage  and  has  not  generated  any
significant  revenues.  As of  June  30, 1996,  the  Company had  an accumulated
deficit since  inception  of  $8,439,200. The  Company  expects  continuing  and
increasing expenditures in research and development as it focuses its efforts on
further   development  and   refinement  of   its  VRD   technology  and  begins
commercialization efforts for its anticipated future products.
 
    CONTRACT REVENUES.  The Company  has completed two research agreements  with
Fujitsu  Research Institute ("FRI"). The FRI agreements provided for the Company
to carry  out research  with  respect to  potential  applications for  the  VRD.
Contract  revenues were $29,300, $27,200 and $56,500 for the year ended December
31, 1995, the six months ended June 30, 1996 and for the period cumulative  from
inception  through June 30, 1996, respectively.  The Company recently received a
$74,980 purchase order from Lockheed Martin Corp. for a prototype display  model
of the VRD for a military trade show in October 1996.
 
    RESEARCH  AND  DEVELOPMENT EXPENSES.    Currently, research  and development
expenses consist primarily of payments due under the Research Agreement with the
University of Washington, as well as payroll and related costs of employees  and
consultants engaged in development activities, and fees
 
                                       15
<PAGE>
related  to  patent applications.  To date,  the Company  has expensed  all such
costs. See Note 2 of Notes to the Financial Statements. Research and development
expenses during the year ended December 31, 1995, the six months ended June  30,
1996  and  the period  cumulative  from inception  through  June 30,  1996, were
$1,931,200, $692,100 and $5,574,500, respectively.  The Company believes that  a
significant  level  of  continuing  research and  development  expenses  will be
required  to  commercialize   the  VRD  technology   and  to  develop   products
incorporating  VRD technology. Accordingly, the Company anticipates that it will
devote substantial  resources  to  research and  development,  including  hiring
additional  personnel, and that these costs  will continue to increase in future
periods.
 
    MARKETING, GENERAL  AND ADMINISTRATIVE  EXPENSES.   Marketing,  general  and
administrative  expenses  include payroll  and related  costs for  the Company's
administrative and executive personnel, costs related to the Company's marketing
and promotional  efforts,  office  lease  expenses  and  other  overhead  costs,
including  legal and accounting costs and fees of consultants and professionals.
In 1993  and 1994,  the Company  used consultants  extensively to  evaluate  the
potential  for  commercialization  of  the VRD  technology  and  to  develop its
business plan. Marketing,  general and administrative  expenses during the  year
ended  December 31,  1995, the  six months  ended June  30, 1996  and the period
cumulative from inception through June 30, 1996, were approximately  $1,037,700,
$670,000  and $2,970,300,  respectively. The Company  expects marketing, general
and administrative expenses to increase  substantially in future periods as  the
Company invests in marketing activities to promote and launch its VRD technology
and  anticipated products and as it increases  its number of employees and level
of corporate and administrative activity.
 
    INCOME TAXES.   At December  31, 1995, the  Company had  net operating  loss
carry-forwards  of  approximately $2,812,000  for  federal income  tax reporting
purposes. The net operating loss carry-forwards will expire beginning in 2005 if
not utilized. In addition,  due to changes in  ownership, as defined by  Section
382  of the Internal  Revenue Code of  1986, as amended  (the "Code"), resulting
from the sale of common stock, convertible preferred stock and the Common  Stock
offered   hereby,   the  annual   deductibility  of   the  net   operating  loss
carry-forwards is  limited  to  approximately  $761,000.  A  further  change  in
ownership is likely to occur upon completion of this offering, which will result
in  further limitations  to the annual  deductibility of the  net operating loss
carry-forwards. A valuation allowance has  been recorded against total  deferred
tax   assets  of  $2,346,000  because  realization  is  primarily  dependent  on
generating sufficient taxable income prior  to expiration of net operating  loss
carry-forwards. See Note 7 of Notes to the Financial Statements.
 
LIQUIDITY AND CAPITAL RESOURCES
 
    To  date, the Company has financed  its operations primarily through private
placements of common stock, convertible  preferred stock and convertible  notes.
As  of June  30, 1996,  amounts raised  in private  equity transactions,  net of
issuance costs,  totaled $6,920,800.  Through  June 30,  1996, the  Company  had
incurred  an accumulated deficit of  $8,439,200, of which $3,529,200 represented
payments made  to  the  University  of  Washington  to  fund  the  research  and
development  of  its  VRD  technology  pursuant to  the  terms  of  the Research
Agreement, and  $1,146,000 represented  non-cash  expenses associated  with  the
issuances  of  stock,  warrants  and  options. The  Company  had  cash  and cash
equivalents of $462,400 at June 30, 1996.
 
    In early July 1996, the Company raised net proceeds of $707,500 in a private
placement of its  7% Notes. The  7% Notes bear  interest at the  rate of 7%  per
annum,  payable semi-annually in  arrears on December  15 and June  15, and will
mature on  July  10,  1997. The  Notes  are  subordinate to  all  future  senior
indebtedness  of the Company. The  7% Notes may be  converted or redeemed at the
option of the holder at any time following 90 days after the effective date of a
registration statement  with  respect  to  an initial  public  offering  of  the
Company's  securities with  aggregate proceeds to  the Company  of $5,000,000 (a
"qualifying IPO"). Upon any conversion, the holder  of a 7% Note is entitled  to
receive  18,000 shares  of Common Stock  for every $100,000  principal amount so
converted. The  7%  Notes  are  redeemable  at  par  (plus  accrued  and  unpaid
interest),  plus 6,000  shares of Common  Stock for every  $100,000 principal so
redeemed. See "Shares Eligible for Future Sale."
 
                                       16
<PAGE>
    The Company's future  expenditures and capital  requirements will depend  on
numerous  factors,  including  the  progress  of  its  research  and development
program, the progress in commercialization activities and arrangements, the cost
of filing,  prosecuting, defending  and enforcing  any patent  claims and  other
intellectual  property rights,  competing technological  and market developments
and the  ability of  the  Company to  establish cooperative  development,  joint
venture  and licensing arrangements.  In order to  maintain its exclusive rights
under the UW  License Agreement,  the Company  is obligated  to make  additional
quarterly research payments through 1997 aggregating $1,604,200 and, thereafter,
to make additional payments in respect of royalties on the VRD. See "Business --
University  of Washington  License Agreement." If  the Company  is successful in
establishing OEM co-development and joint  venture arrangements, it is  expected
that  the Company's partners would  fund certain non-recurring engineering costs
for product development. Nevertheless, the Company expects its cash requirements
to increase significantly each year as it expands its activities and operations.
There can  be no  assurance  that the  Company will  ever  be able  to  generate
revenues or achieve or sustain profitability.
 
    The  Company believes  that the  estimated net  proceeds from  this offering
together with its existing  cash and cash equivalent  balances will satisfy  its
budgeted capital and operating requirements for at least the next twelve months,
which  are estimated to be  approximately $480,000 and $4,088,000, respectively,
based upon the Company's current  operating plan. Actual expenses, however,  may
exceed  the  amount budgeted  therefor and  the  Company may  require additional
capital earlier to develop its products, to respond to competitive pressures  or
to  meet unanticipated  development difficulties.  The Company's  operating plan
calls for  the purchase  and installation  of certain  laboratory equipment  and
facilities,  the addition  of technical  and business  staff, including  a chief
financial officer and engineering  staff. The operating  plan also provides  for
the  completion of the Research Agreement  with the University of Washington and
the  development  of   strategic  relationships  with   systems  and   equipment
manufacturers.  See  "Business."  There  can  be  no  assurance  that additional
financing will be available  to the Company  or that, if  available, it will  be
available  on terms  acceptable to  the Company on  a timely  basis. If adequate
funds are  not  available to  satisfy  either short-term  or  long-term  capital
requirements, the Company may be required to limit its operations significantly.
The  Company's capital requirements will depend  on many factors, including, but
not limited  to,  the  rate  at  which the  Company  can,  directly  or  through
arrangements  with OEMs, introduce products incorporating the VRD technology and
the market  acceptance and  competitive  position of  such products.  See  "Risk
Factors -- Capital Requirements."
 
                                       17
<PAGE>
                                    BUSINESS
 
OVERVIEW
 
    Microvision,  through an exclusive  license and research  agreement with the
University of Washington,  is developing information  display technologies  that
allow  electronically generated images and  information to be projected directly
onto the retina  of the viewer's  eye. The Company  has developed prototype  VRD
devices,  including a  portable monochrome  version and  a table-top, full-color
version, and  is  currently  refining  and developing  its  VRD  for  commercial
applications.  The Company expects  to commercialize its  technology through the
development of products  and as  a supplier  of personal  display technology  to
OEMs.  The Company believes  the VRD technology  will be useful  in a variety of
applications, including portable  communication devices,  visual simulation  and
entertainment  displays and devices that superimpose  images on the user's field
of vision. The Company expects that its technology will permit the use of highly
miniaturized,  lightweight,  battery-operated  viewing   devices  that  can   be
comfortably held or worn as "headphones for the eyes."
 
INDUSTRY BACKGROUND
 
    The  ubiquitous  nature  of  personal  computing,  electronic communication,
television and  video  products  has  created a  worldwide  market  for  display
technologies. Information displays are the primary medium through which text and
images  generated  by computer  and other  electronic  systems are  delivered to
end-users. While early computer  systems were designed and  used for tasks  that
involved little interaction between the user and the computer, today's graphical
and  multimedia  information  and computing  environments  require  systems that
devote most of their resources to  generating and updating visual displays.  The
market  for  display technologies  also has  been  stimulated by  the increasing
popularity of  portable  pagers  and  cellular  phones;  interest  in  simulated
environments and augmented vision systems; and the recognition that better means
of  connecting  people and  machines can  improve  productivity and  enhance the
enjoyment of electronic entertainment and learning experiences.
 
    For decades, the CRT has been the dominant display device. A CRT creates  an
image  by scanning a beam of electrons across a phosphor- coated screen, causing
the phosphors to emit visible  light. The beam is  generated by an electron  gun
and  is passed through a  deflection system that scans  the beam rapidly left to
right and top to bottom. A magnetic  lens focuses the beam into a small  glowing
dot on the phosphor screen. It is these rapidly moving spots of light ("pixels")
that "paint" the image on the surface of the viewing screen. The next generation
of imaging technology, flat panel displays, is now in widespread use in portable
computers,  calculators, and other personal  display devices. The most prevalent
flat panel technology is the liquid  crystal display ("LCD"), which can  consist
of  hundreds  of  thousands of  pixels,  each of  which  is formed  by  a single
transistor acting on a crystalline material.
 
    In recent  years,  as the  computer  and electronics  industries  have  made
substantial  advances in miniaturization, manufacturers have sought lightweight,
low power, cost-effective displays  to enable the  development of more  portable
products.  Flat panel technologies have made meaningful advances in these areas,
and liquid  crystal  flat  panel  displays are  now  commonly  used  for  laptop
computers  and other electronic products. Both  CRT and flat panel technologies,
however, pose difficult  engineering and  fabrication problems  for more  highly
miniaturized products, because of inherent constraints in size, weight and power
consumption.  In addition,  many products that  use CRT and  flat panel displays
often become dim and  difficult to see  in outdoor or  other settings where  the
ambient  light is stronger than  the light emitted from  the screen. The Company
believes that as display technologies attempt to keep pace with  miniaturization
and  other advances in  information delivery systems,  conventional CRT and flat
panel technologies  will experience  increasing  difficulty providing  the  full
range  of performance  characteristics --  high resolution,  bright display, low
power consumption -- required for state-of-the-art information systems.
 
MICROVISION'S RETINAL DISPLAY TECHNOLOGY
 
    The Company's VRD is fundamentally different from previously  commercialized
display  technologies. The VRD  creates an image  directly on the  retina like a
miniaturized video projector focused on
 
                                       18
<PAGE>
the  "projection  screen"  at  the  back   of  the  viewer's  eye.  In   certain
applications, the image appears in the viewer's field of vision as if the viewer
were  only  an arm's  length  away from  a high  quality  video screen.  The VRD
technology also  can superimpose  an  image on  the  viewer's field  of  vision,
enabling  the viewer to see data or other information projected by the device in
the context of his or her natural surroundings. In each case, a high resolution,
bright image is created.
 
    By scanning a  low-power beam  of colored light  to "paint"  rows of  pixels
directly  on the retina of  the viewer's eye, the  VRD technology creates a high
resolution, full-motion image without the use of screens or externally projected
images. The  light source  acts on  the retina  in much  the same  way as  other
natural  light sources. The VRD is composed  of four basic components: (1) drive
electronics; (2) photon sources; (3)  horizontal and vertical scanners; and  (4)
optics.
 
                         VIRTUAL RETINAL DISPLAY SYSTEM
 
                                 [CHART]
 
    The  drive electronics  acquire and process  signals from the  image or data
source to control  and synchronize the  color mix, grey-level  and placement  of
pixels.  Color pixels are generated by a modulated light source which varies the
intensity of red, green and blue light to generate a complete palette of  colors
and  shades. The pixels are then arranged  on the retina by a horizontal scanner
that rapidly  sweeps the  light beam  to  place the  pixels into  a row,  and  a
vertical  scanner, which moves the light beam to the next line where another row
of pixels is drawn. Refractive and reflective optical elements direct the  light
beam  into the viewer's eye, projecting an image through the viewer's pupil onto
the retina.
 
STRATEGY
 
    The Company's objective is to be a leading provider of personal display  and
imaging  technology in a broad range  of professional and consumer applications.
Key elements of the Company's strategy to achieve this objective are:
 
    CUSTOM DESIGN,  MANUFACTURE AND  SALE  OF HIGH  PERFORMANCE PRODUCTS.    The
Company   anticipates  providing  high   performance  products  to  professional
end-users in markets with lower product volume requirements. The Company expects
that end-users in this category will  include professionals in the defense,  law
enforcement, industrial process controls and health care industries. As a result
of  the potential for professionals in  these industries to realize productivity
or performance gains and  associated economic benefit from  the use of  personal
display  products, the Company believes that  customers in these industries will
be less sensitive to  the cost of  VRD products than  customers in the  consumer
electronics  markets. The  Company also believes  that, because  the unit volume
requirements for such end-users  are generally lower,  demand for such  products
may  be more predictable and the  risks associated with production and inventory
more easily managed. Depending upon the circumstances,
 
                                       19
<PAGE>
the Company may manufacture these  products, using standard component  suppliers
and  contract manufacturers as required,  or may seek to  form one or more joint
ventures to manufacture the products. The Company expects that early  production
of  specially designed products  will enhance its ability  to provide more fully
integrated solutions  and support  for the  development of  similar products  by
manufacturers in high volume consumer markets.
 
    SUPPLY  OF  DISPLAY  AND  IMAGING  SOLUTIONS  AND  LICENSING  OF PROPRIETARY
TECHNOLOGY TO OEMS  FOR VOLUME MANUFACTURE  OF PRODUCTS.   The Company  believes
that  in consumer  markets the ability  of personal display  products to compete
effectively is largely driven by the  ability to price aggressively for  maximum
market  penetration.  Significant  economies  of  scale  in  purchasing,  volume
manufacturing and distribution are important  factors in driving costs  downward
to  achieve pricing objectives and profitability. Additionally, certain types of
products, such as pagers or cellular phones, may require the integration of  the
VRD  with other unrelated  electronic technologies. In  markets requiring volume
production  of  personal  display  products,  the  Company  intends  to  provide
components,  subsystems and  systems design  technology to  OEMs under licensing
agreements. Microvision's strategy  will be  to seek both  initial license  fees
from such arrangements as well as ongoing per unit royalties.
 
    The   Company   expects  such   relationships  may   involve  a   period  of
co-development during which  engineering and marketing  professionals from  OEMs
would  work with Microvision's technical staff  to specify, design and develop a
product appropriate to the targeted market and application. Microvision  intends
to  charge  fees to  such  OEMs to  cover the  costs  of the  engineering effort
allocated to such  development projects.  The nature of  the relationships  with
such OEMs may vary from partner to partner depending on the proposed application
for  the VRD, the product  to be developed, and  the OEM's design, manufacturing
and distribution capabilities.  The Company  believes that by  limiting its  own
direct  manufacturing  obligations  for  consumer products  it  will  reduce the
capital requirements and  risks inherent  in bringing  the VRD  to the  consumer
market.
 
    The  Company  believes  that  it can  enhance  its  competitive  position by
reducing the cost  and improving the  performance of its  VRD technology and  by
expanding  its  portfolio of  intellectual property  rights. A  key part  of the
Company's technology development strategy includes developing and protecting (i)
concepts relating to  the function, design  and application of  the VRD  system;
(ii)   component  technologies  and  integration  techniques  essential  to  the
commercialization of  the VRD  and which  are expected  to reduce  the cost  and
improve  the performance  of the  system; and  (iii) component  technologies and
integration techniques  that reduce  technical requirements  and accelerate  the
pace  of  commercial development.  The Company  is continuing  to work  with the
University of  Washington to  develop a  portfolio of  proprietary and  patented
technologies, processes and techniques that relate directly to the functionality
and  to  the commercial  viability  of the  VRD  technology. See  "-- Technology
Development" and "-- Intellectual Property and Proprietary Rights."
 
APPLICATIONS, MARKETS AND PRODUCTS
 
    Microvision has identified a variety of potential applications for its  VRD,
including the following:
 
    HAND-HELD  COMMUNICATIONS DEVICES.   Manufacturers of  wireless and cellular
communications devices  have identified  a need  for products  that  incorporate
personal  display units for  viewing fax, electronic mail  and graphic images on
highly miniaturized devices. Existing  display technologies have had  difficulty
satisfying  this demand fully  because of the requirements  that such devices be
highly miniaturized, full format, relatively low cost, and offer high resolution
and brightness  without  requiring  high levels  of  power  supply.  Microvision
expects  that  the range  of  potential products  in  this category  may include
cellular phones  and pagers  that project  into view  electronic mail  messages,
faxes, or other images in a bright, sharp display.
 
    VISUAL  SIMULATION AND ENTERTAINMENT DISPLAYS.  Manufacturers of interactive
media products have recognized that the visual experience offered by  simulation
is enhanced by high resolution, three-dimensional displays projected over a wide
field of vision. Although simulated environments traditionally have been used as
a  training  tool  for professional  use,  they  are increasingly  popular  as a
 
                                       20
<PAGE>
means of entertainment, particularly in  computer games. In a  three-dimensional
video  game, an  inexpensive pair of  VRD eyeglasses  with a wide  field of view
could provide a highly immersive visual experience.
 
    AUGMENTED VISION DISPLAYS.   Augmented vision applications superimpose  high
contrast,  monochromatic (or color) images and information on the viewer's field
of vision as a means of enhancing the safety, precision and speed of the  user's
performance  of  tasks. For  example, a  head-mounted display  could superimpose
critical  patient  information  such  as  vital  signs,  EKG  traces,  reference
materials,  X-rays or MRI  images in a  surgeon's field of  vision. For military
applications, troops  could  be  equipped  with  eyeglasses  that  display  high
definition imagery that could be viewed without blocking normal vision and could
assist in threat detection, reconnaissance and other activities.
 
    Microvision  has  targeted  various  market  segments  for  these  potential
applications,  including  defense  and  public  safety,  healthcare,   business,
industrial  and  consumer electronics.  The  following table  identifies product
development opportunities within each of these markets.
 
                                 [CHART]
 
    Microvision believes certain market segments  will be early adopters of  the
VRD technology, particularly those industries for which VRD in an early stage of
development   can  offer  significant  productivity  or  performance  gains  and
associated cost savings. The Company believes that military and industrial users
will place value  on the  ability of personal  VRD devices  to superimpose  high
contrast  images  on the  user's natural  field of  vision. Similarly,  users of
wireless devices who  have a  need to receive  critical or  timely data  through
electronic  mail, Internet or  facsimile transmission are  expected to value the
performance characteristics that VRDs are expected to deliver.
 
    Microvision is in  discussions with systems  and equipment manufacturers  in
the  defense,  wireless communications,  computing  and commercial  and consumer
electronics industries.  The  Company intends  to  work with  certain  of  these
manufacturers  to  develop or  co-develop  specific products  which  the Company
believes to  be  the  most  commercially  viable.  The  Company  has  identified
specifications for several products which it believes may address the particular
needs of development programs
 
                                       21
<PAGE>
sponsored  by the  U.S. military  and which  can be  priced competitively. These
products include a high performance,  full-color helmet-mounted display for  use
in interactive simulations, and a medium priced, helmet-mounted augmented vision
device  that superimposes  information in a  monochromatic format  on the user's
natural field  of vision  and can  be  worn by  technicians and  other  military
personnel  to provide  easy access to  real-time data. In  addition, the Company
believes it may  develop moderately  priced eyeglasses  or goggles  that can  be
fitted for augmented vision display and would be suitable for a variety of uses.
There  can be  no assurance  that the Company  will be  successful in developing
these or other proposed products,  with or without codevelopment partners.  Even
if  the  Company  is  successful  in  arranging  development  or  co-development
projects, it does not expect commercial  sales of products until at least  1998,
and commercial sales may not occur until substantially later, if at all.
 
PROTOTYPES
 
    To  date the  Company has developed  only two prototypes  to demonstrate the
feasibility of the VRD  technology. These prototypes  are not incorporated  into
specific  commercial  products  or applications,  but  rather  are demonstration
models of the technology.  The first prototype developed  was a table-top  model
that  receives output from a personal  computer. This prototype generates a full
color image. A  combination of  reflective and refractive  optical elements  are
positioned  around the eye,  but do not  obscure the user's  field of vision, so
that as the image is scanned onto the optics and reflected onto the retina,  the
viewer perceives the image superimposed on the viewer's natural field of vision.
The  second prototype fits into a briefcase and is portable. It also connects to
a personal  computer.  At  present  the  portable  prototype  generates  only  a
monochromatic  image. The projection  optics of the  portable prototype together
with the vertical and horizontal scanner and the light source are packaged in  a
module,  which can  be hand-held  or mounted  to a  stand. The  electronics that
receive and condition the signal are packaged separately in the briefcase.
 
    Significant work  will  be  required  in  the  area  of  drive  electronics,
development  of photon sources, scanning techniques and optics design to advance
the VRD from prototype to product stage. See "-- Technology Development."
 
TECHNOLOGY DEVELOPMENT
 
    The  Company's  existing  prototypes  have  demonstrated  the  technological
feasibility  of the VRD and the Company's  ability to miniaturize certain of its
key components.  Additional  work is  in  progress to  continue  miniaturization
advances  necessary for commercial application, to achieve full color capability
in miniaturized versions, to expand the exit pupil of the VRD and to design  for
specific applications.
 
    DRIVE  ELECTRONICS.  The Company has  identified four areas where additional
development of the drive  electronics is necessary.  The first involves  further
miniaturization  using integrated circuits and advanced packaging techniques. To
date, the  Company  has identified  no  technological barriers  to  the  further
miniaturization  of the drive electronics. The second area involves refining the
timing and  nature of  the signals  driving the  photon source  and scanners  to
improve  display quality.  The third and  fourth areas of  development relate to
achieving and improving compatibility of the drive electronics with existing and
newly emerging video standards. The Company's existing prototypes are compatible
with current video format standards and the output from most personal computers.
In the future, the Company intends to develop  the VRD to conform to a range  of
interface  standards,  including  emerging  standards  such  as  high definition
television. For interfaces with emerging video standards, additional development
of the drive electronics technology will likely be required.
 
    PHOTON SOURCES.  The photon generator is  the source of the light beam  that
creates the image on the retina. In a full-color VRD, red, green and blue photon
generators will be used, each with its own modulator, to generate a mix yielding
the  desired color and  brightness. Low- power solid  state lasers, laser diodes
and light-emitting diodes ("LEDs") are  suitable photon generators for the  VRD.
Red,  blue and green solid state lasers  are currently available, but are useful
only for VRD  applications where cost  and size are  not critical.  Miniaturized
visible    laser    diodes    are    currently    available    only    in   red,
 
                                       22
<PAGE>
although a number of  companies are developing laser  diodes in green and  blue.
Miniaturized  LEDs  are less  expensive than  laser diodes  and the  Company has
developed a  miniature red  LED,  which appears  to  respond quickly  enough  to
sustain  a VGA display and  is expected to cost  less to produce than equivalent
wavelength laser diodes. Microvision expects these LEDs will provide  sufficient
brightness  for certain applications, however,  Microvision expects to use laser
diodes for augmented  vision applications that  require maximum brightness.  The
Company  intends to rely on others to  complete development of the materials and
processes necessary  to produce  blue  and green  LEDs  and laser  diodes.  This
development  is not expected prior to the introduction of the Company's proposed
initial products, and as a result the Company's proposed initial full color  VRD
products are likely to use solid state lasers.
 
    SCANNING.   A pair of scanners, one  horizontal and one vertical, is used to
direct the light beam that  creates the image on  the retina. In laser  printers
and  bar code readers, a spinning or oscillating  mirror is used to scan a light
beam, but these mechanical scanners are typically too large and too slow for use
in miniaturized  display  settings.  To  solve this  problem,  the  Company  has
developed the MRS. In operation, the MRS resembles a very small tuning fork with
a  mirrored surface.  It is  tuned to resonate  at the  exact scanning frequency
needed to generate the display, so that  very little power is needed to keep  it
oscillating.  Directing the light beam at  the vibrating mirror causes the light
beam to scan rapidly back and forth horizontally. The second vibrating mirror is
used to direct the horizontal beam vertically. The Company believes that its MRS
may have significant commercial value independent of the VRD.
 
    Continued development of the scanning subsystem of the VRD will be  required
in  order  to  allow scanning  capability  for current  standard  video formats,
including high definition television,  as well as  new digital video  standards.
Existing  designs for scanner  and scanner electronics  may prove ineffective at
higher resolutions  and  may  need  to be  replaced  with  alternative  scanning
methods.  As a  result, achievement  of future  video standards  may necessitate
additional development of both the scanner and the scanner electronics.
 
    OPTICS.   For  applications where  the  VRD device  is  to be  worn,  it  is
desirable  to have an  exit pupil (the  range within which  the viewer's eye can
move and continue to see the image) of at least 10 millimeters. The Company  has
recently  developed an  expanded exit pupil  of approximately this  size and the
University of Washington has filed a U.S. patent application to seek to  protect
this  feature. Continued design  and engineering of this  expanded exit pupil is
required to  develop  commercial  applications.  The  Company's  ongoing  optics
development  is directed at the creation of optical systems that are lightweight
and cost-effective to manufacture.
 
UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON LICENSE AGREEMENT
 
    Microvision's technology was developed at the University of Washington's HIT
Lab by a team of technicians and  engineers under the direction of Dr.  Furness.
See  "Management  --  HIT  Lab  Personnel."  In  1993,  Microvision  secured the
exclusive rights to the VRD technology and associated intellectual property from
the University of Washington pursuant to the UW License Agreement. The scope  of
the license covers all possible commercial uses of the VRD, worldwide, including
the  right to grant sublicenses. The license  expires upon the expiration of the
last of  the  University's patents.  In  granting the  license,  the  University
retained  limited non-commercial rights  with respect to  the VRD, including the
right to  use  the  technology for  non-commercial  research  and  instructional
purposes   and  the  right   to  comply  with   applicable  laws  regarding  the
non-exclusive use  of  the  technology  by the  United  States  government.  The
University   also  has  the  right  to  consent  to  Microvision's  sublicensing
arrangements  and  to   the  prosecution  and   settlement  by  Microvision   of
infringement disputes.
 
    Microvision  may lose the exclusivity of its  license if it fails to satisfy
certain  requirements  with  respect  to  the  commercialization  of  the   VRD,
including,  without limitation,  having the  VRD technology  or VRD applications
available for  commercial  use,  sale  or licensing  within  two  years  of  the
termination  of  the Research  Agreement,  failing to  use  its best  efforts to
commercialize the VRD technology, failing  to provide reports to the  University
from  time to time as provided in the License Agreement or failing to respond to
any  infringement  action   within  90   days  of  learning   of  such   action.
 
                                       23
<PAGE>
In  the event of the termination of Microvision's exclusivity, Microvision would
lose its rights to grant sublicenses and would no longer have the first right to
take action against any alleged  infringement. In addition, each of  Microvision
and  the  University  of  Washington  has the  right  to  terminate  the License
Agreement in the event that the other  party fails to cure a material breach  of
the  Agreement within 30 days  of written notice of  the breach. Microvision may
terminate the License  Agreement at any  time by serving  90 days prior  written
notice  on the University of Washington. In  the event of any termination of the
License Agreement, the license granted to Microvision would terminate.
 
    Under the terms  of the UW  License Agreement, Microvision  agreed to pay  a
non-refundable  fee  of  $5,133,500 (the  "License  Fee")  and to  issue  to the
University and to the  inventors of the VRD  technology, including Dr.  Furness,
shares  of Microvision's Common Stock. In addition, the University of Washington
is entitled to receive certain  ongoing royalties. See "Management's  Discussion
and  Analysis of Financial Condition and  Results of Operations -- Liquidity and
Capital Resources." If Microvision were  to terminate the UW License  Agreement,
it  believes that further payments of the License Fee would not be required and,
accordingly, has not booked the balance  of payments due as an accrued  expense.
However, the language of the UW License Agreement is unclear on this point and a
contrary  interpretation suggests that  the Company may be  obligated to pay any
remaining balance of the  license fee. In any  event, the Company considers  the
exclusive  license to  be an  essential element of  its business  plan and fully
intends to pay the balance of  the License Fee, most probably through  continued
payments under the Research Agreement.
 
    At  the  same  time  it  entered  into  the  License  Agreement, Microvision
contracted with the HIT Lab and  the Washington Technology Center, an agency  of
the  State of  Washington created  to foster  the development  of the technology
industry within the state (the "WTC"),  to fund the research and development  of
the  VRD  technology  pursuant to  the  Research Agreement.  The  VRD technology
research undertaken by the HIT  Lab is under the  direction of Dr. Furness.  Any
intellectual  property developed  by the HIT  Lab pursuant to  this Agreement is
included in the exclusive  license granted to Microvision  under the UW  License
Agreement. Microvision pays the University $320,844 per quarter for the research
performed  by  the HIT  Lab. To  date,  Microvision has  paid $3,529,282  to the
University of Washington under the Research Agreement. Payments made pursuant to
the Research Agreement are credited against the License Fee. See Note 5 of Notes
to the Financial Statements.
 
    In the event that Microvision defaults in its obligations, including payment
obligations, under  the Research  Agreement, the  University may  terminate  the
License  Agreement. The Research  Agreement currently is  scheduled to expire in
late 1997, but may  be continued by  agreement of the parties.  In an effort  to
match  more closely  the timing of  the Company's funding  obligations under the
Research Agreement with the research performed  by the HIT Lab, the Company  and
the University are currently discussing rescheduling payments under the Research
Agreement  and extending the term of the Research Agreement. The HIT Lab and the
Company work together closely,  and Stephen R.  Willey, the Company's  Executive
Vice  President and Technical Liaison, acts as  liaison between the HIT Lab, WTC
and the Company. In  addition, the HIT Lab  provides the Company with  quarterly
reports  on each functional  area of the research  and development activities it
conducts, such as optics, mechanics, electronics and photonics, and  Microvision
employees and personnel at the HIT Lab jointly determine the direction of future
research and development activities.
 
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND PROPRIETARY RIGHTS
 
    The  Company's  ability to  compete effectively  in the  information display
market will depend, in part, on the ability of the Company and the University of
Washington to  maintain  the  proprietary  nature of  the  VRD  technology.  The
University  of Washington has been awarded  one U.S. patent with claims relating
to the function, design, and application  of the VRD system. Patent No.  5467104
issued  in November 1995 has 11 claims, including claims directed to the ability
to superimpose images  on the user's  field of vision.  The University also  has
received  notices of allowance from  the U.S. Patent and  Trademark Office for a
novel scanning device, a  key component for  effective commercialization of  the
VRD  system, and for a fiber optic pixel source. A notice of allowance indicates
that the U.S. Patent and
 
                                       24
<PAGE>
Trademark Office has completed its examination of the application and determined
that  the  application  meets  the  statutory  requirements  for  patentability.
Although a notice of allowance does not in itself afford patent protection, once
a  notice of allowance  is issued it is  expected that a  patent will issue upon
completion of the U.S. Patent  and Trademark Office publication formalities.  In
addition, the University has filed applications for patents in the United States
and  in certain foreign  countries. The inventions  covered by such applications
generally  address   and   accommodate   component   miniaturization,   specific
implementation  of various system  components and design  elements to facilitate
mass production.
 
    The Company  considers protection  of these  key enabling  technologies  and
components  to  be a  fundamental aspect  of its  strategy to  penetrate diverse
markets with unique  products. As such,  it intends to  continue to develop  its
portfolio  of proprietary and  patented technologies, at  the system, component,
and process levels.  There can be  no assurance,  however, as to  the degree  of
protection  offered by these patents, or as  to the likelihood that patents will
be issued from the pending patent applications. Moreover, these patents may have
limited commercial value or  may lack sufficient  breadth to protect  adequately
the aspects of the Company's technology to which the patents relate.
 
    There also can be no assurance that competitors, in the United States and in
foreign  countries, many of which have  substantially greater resources than the
Company and have  made substantial investments  in competing technologies,  will
not  apply for and obtain patents that will prevent, limit or interfere with the
Company's ability to make and sell  its products, or intentionally infringe  the
University's  patents. The  Company is  aware of  several patents  held by third
parties that relate to certain aspects of retinal scanning devices. There is  no
assurance  that these  patents would  not be  used as  a basis  to challenge the
validity  of  the  University's  patent  rights,  to  limit  the  scope  of  the
University's  patent  rights  or to  limit  the University's  ability  to obtain
additional or broader patent rights. A  successful challenge to the validity  of
the  Company's patents may  adversely affect the  Company's competitive position
and could  limit the  Company's  ability to  commercialize the  VRD  technology.
Moreover,  there can  be no  assurance that such  patent holders  or other third
parties will not  claim infringement by  the Company or  by the University  with
respect  to current and future technology.  Because U.S. patent applications are
held and examined in  secrecy, it is also  possible that presently pending  U.S.
patent  applications will eventually issue with claims that will be infringed by
the Company's products  or the VRD  technology. The defense  and prosecution  of
patent  suits is  costly and time-consuming,  even if the  outcome is favorable.
This is particularly  true in  foreign countries where  the expenses  associated
with such proceedings can be prohibitive. An adverse outcome in the defense of a
patent  suit  could  subject the  Company  to significant  liabilities  to third
parties,  require  the  Company  and  others  to  cease  selling  products  that
incorporate  VRD technology  or cease licensing  the VRD  technology, or require
disputed rights to  be licensed  from third parties.  Such licenses  may not  be
available  on satisfactory terms or at  all. Moreover, if claims of infringement
are asserted against future co-development partners or customers of the Company,
those partners  or  customers may  seek  indemnification from  the  Company  for
damages or expenses they incur.
 
    The  Company also relies on unpatented  proprietary technology and there can
be no assurance that  others may not independently  develop the same or  similar
technology  or otherwise obtain access  to the Company's proprietary technology.
To protect its  rights in these  areas, the Company  requires all employees  and
most  consultants, advisors and collaborators  to enter into confidentiality and
noncompetition agreements.  There  can  be no  assurance,  however,  that  these
agreements  will provide meaningful protection  for the Company's trade secrets,
know-how or other proprietary information in the event of any unauthorized  use,
misappropriation  or  disclosure  of  such  trade  secrets,  know-how  or  other
proprietary information. In addition, the  University of Washington retains  the
right to publish information regarding the VRD technology for academic purposes.
To  date, the  Company has  had no  experience in  enforcing its confidentiality
agreements.
 
                                       25
<PAGE>
HUMAN FACTORS AND SAFETY
 
    As part of  its research  and development activities,  the Company  conducts
ongoing  research as to the cognitive,  physiological and ergonomic factors that
must be addressed by products incorporating  VRD technologies and the safety  of
VRD  technology, including such issues as the maximum permissible laser exposure
limits  established   by  American   National  Standards   Institute   ("ANSI").
Researchers  from the HIT Lab  concluded that, assuming use  of a VRD device for
eight continuous  hours, laser  exposure to  the retina  would be  approximately
100,000 times below the maximum permissible exposure levels established by ANSI.
If the horizontal and vertical scanners were to fail such that the photon output
were  continuous,  a user  would experience  laser exposure  approximately 1,000
times below the ANSI limits before the user would likely look away from the  VRD
or  avert his or her eyes.  In the event that the user  did not avert his or her
eyes from the VRD, the  user would have to remain  perfectly still and focus  on
the VRD for several hours to reach the ANSI maximum permissible exposure level.
 
COMPETITION
 
    The  information  display  industry  is  highly  competitive.  The Company's
products and the VRD technology will be competing with established manufacturers
of miniaturized CRT and flat panel display devices, including companies such  as
Sony   Corporation  and  Texas  Instruments  Incorporated,  most  of  whom  have
substantially greater financial, technical and other resources than the  Company
and  many of whom are developing alternative miniature display technologies. The
Company also will compete with other developers of miniaturized display devices.
There can be  no assurance that  the Company's competitors  will not succeed  in
developing technologies and products that would render the VRD technology or the
Company's products obsolete and non-competitive.
 
    The  electronic information display industry has been characterized by rapid
and significant technological advances. There can  be no assurance that the  VRD
technology  or the Company's proposed products will remain competitive with such
advances or  that  the Company  will  have sufficient  funds  to invest  in  new
technologies  or products or  processes. Although the  Company believes that its
VRD technology and proposed display products should deliver images of a  quality
and  resolution substantially better than that of commercially available LCD and
CRT-based display products, there is no assurance that manufacturers of LCDs and
CRTs will not  develop further  improvements of screen  display technology  that
would eliminate or diminish the anticipated advantages of the Company's proposed
products.
 
OTHER TECHNOLOGY INVESTMENT
 
    The  Company  intends to  pursue the  acquisition  and development  of other
imaging and display technologies as opportunities to do so arise.
 
    In March 1994, the Company entered into a second exclusive license agreement
with the University of Washington to commercialize imaging technology  unrelated
to  the  VRD technology.  This technology  involves the  projection of  data and
information onto the inside  of a dome  that is placed  over the viewer's  head.
This  imaging  technology is  referred to  as HALO.  The HALO  license agreement
requires the Company  to pay  $200,000 to the  University, and  to issue  93,750
shares  of Common Stock to  the University and the  inventors of the technology,
upon the achievement of certain  milestones, including, among other things,  the
receipt  by the University  of a patent  covering the technology.  See Note 5 of
Notes to the Financial Statements.
 
LEGAL PROCEEDINGS
 
    During the period  March 1994  through June  1995, warrants  to purchase  an
aggregate  of 343,750  shares of  Common Stock at  prices ranging  from $0.80 to
$6.40 per share were approved by  the Company's Board of Directors for  issuance
to  a director. The director resigned his position in August 1995. Subsequent to
December 31,  1995, the  Board of  Directors  concluded that  the grant  of  the
warrants  to the former director had  neither been properly authorized under the
Washington Business
 
                                       26
<PAGE>
Corporation Act nor  supported by  adequate consideration.  The former  director
disputes the Company's view of the circumstances surrounding the approval of the
Warrants,  has engaged counsel with  respect to the matter  and has informed the
Company that  if settlement  of the  parties' differences  with respect  to  the
warrants is not reached, he intends to commence legal action seeking damages for
breach  of contract and  a declaration that  the warrants are  in full force and
effect. Although the Company believes its position with respect to the  warrants
is  correct, if the  former director were  to commence legal  action against the
Company, there is no assurance that he would not prevail on some or all of  such
claims.
 
    Dr.  Thomas  A. Furness  has notified  the  Company that  he believes  he is
entitled to  additional  compensation for  past  services to  the  Company.  Dr.
Furness  has proposed  that the Company  award him warrants  to purchase 156,250
shares of Common  Stock. The  Company and Dr.  Furness are  in discussions  with
respect  to this proposal  and a consulting  agreement that would  provide for a
continuing level of  involvement by Dr.  Furness as a  technical advisor to  the
Company.  Dr. Furness has  retained counsel to represent  him in connection with
his proposal  to  the Company  and  has informed  the  Company that  unless  his
proposal is accepted he intends to commence legal action against the Company.
 
EMPLOYEES
 
    As of August 20, 1996 Microvision had eight full-time employees. Microvision
is  actively seeking additional qualified full-time personnel where appropriate,
and has  reached agreements  to  hire three  new  employees, including  a  chief
financial  officer  and two  research  engineers, following  completion  of this
offering. The Company's employees are  not subject to any collective  bargaining
agreements  and management regards its relations  with employees to be good. See
"Risk Factors -- Dependence on Key Personnel" and "Management."
 
FACILITIES
 
    Microvision currently leases approximately 5,600 square feet of combined use
office and laboratory space at 2203 Airport Way South in Seattle, Washington. In
addition, the VRD research facility occupies approximately 1,500 square feet  of
laboratory  space at the HIT Lab located  on the University of Washington campus
in Seattle, Washington. The laboratory space is provided in connection with  the
research  activities performed by the HIT  Lab. See "-- University of Washington
License Agreement."  The  Company  believes  that  the  current  facilities  are
adequate  and anticipates that additional space  will be available on reasonable
terms if needed.
 
                                       27
<PAGE>
                                   MANAGEMENT
 
EXECUTIVE OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS
 
    The executive officers and directors of the Company are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
            NAME                   AGE                            POSITION
- -----------------------------      ---      -----------------------------------------------------
<S>                            <C>          <C>
Richard F. Rutkowski (1)               40   Chief Executive Officer, President and Director
Stephen R. Willey                      42   Executive Vice President, Technical Liaison and
                                             Director
Richard A. Raisig (1)                  49   Director
Walter J. Lack (1)(2)                  48   Director
Robert A. Ratliffe                     36   Director
Jacob Brouwer (2)                      70   Director
Richard A. Cowell                      49   Director
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Member of the Compensation and Finance Committees
 
(2) Member of the Audit Committee
 
    RICHARD  F. RUTKOWSKI served as Chief  Operating Officer of the Company from
December 1994 until September 1995, Chief Executive Officer of the Company since
September 1995, as a director of the Company since August 1995, and was  elected
President  of the Company in July 1996.  Between November 1992 and May 1994, Mr.
Rutkowski  served  as  Executive   Vice  President  of  Medialink   Technologies
Corporation  (formerly Lone Wolf Corporation), a developer of high speed digital
networking technology  for  multimedia applications  in  audio-video  computing,
consumer  electronics and  telecommunications. Between  February 1990  and April
1995, Mr. Rutkowski was  principal of Rutkowski,  Erickson, Scott, a  consulting
firm.  Mr. Rutkowski also serves as a director of Digital Data Networks, Inc., a
developer of wireless  communications systems and  networked electronic  display
media for the transit industry.
 
    STEPHEN  R. WILLEY  has served  as Executive  Vice President  of the Company
since October 1995 and as a director since June 1995. Mr. Willey also serves  as
the  Company's  technical liaison  to the  University  of Washington's  HIT Lab.
Between January 1994 and April 1996, Mr. Willey served as an outside  consultant
to  the Company through DGI The Development  Group, Inc. ("DGI"), a business and
technology consulting firm that  Mr. Willey founded in  1982 and CSI  Connection
Systems,  Inc., also  a business and  technology consulting firm  founded by Mr.
Willey. As principal of DGI, Mr. Willey provided technology consulting  services
to  CREO Products, Inc., an  electro-optics equipment manufacturer, between June
1989 and  December 1992.  Mr. Willey  also co-founded  PRO. NET  Communications,
Inc.,  an Internet services company. Mr. Willey has served as a director of PRO.
NET since 1994.
 
    RICHARD A. RAISIG has served as a  director of the Company since March  1996
and  has agreed to accept the position of Chief Financial Officer of the Company
in September 1996.  Mr. Raisig  is currently  Chief Financial  Officer of  Videx
Equipment  Corporation, a manufacturer and rebuilder  of wire line equipment for
the cabling industry. From July 1992 to May 1995, Mr. Raisig was Chief Financial
Officer and  Senior  Vice  President-Finance  for  Killion  Extruders,  Inc.,  a
manufacturer  of plastic extrusion  equipment. From February  1990 to July 1992,
Mr. Raisig  was Managing  Director  of Crimson  Capital Company,  an  investment
banking  firm. Prior  to 1990, Mr.  Raisig was  a Senior Vice  President of Dean
Witter Reynolds, Inc. Mr. Raisig is a Certified Public Accountant.
 
    WALTER J. LACK has served  as a director of  the Company since August  1995.
Mr.  Lack is a partner  of Engstrom, Lipscomb &  Lack, a Los Angeles, California
law firm that he founded in 1974. Mr. Lack has acted as a special arbitrator for
the Superior Court of the  State of California since  1976 and for the  American
Arbitration  Association since 1979. Mr. Lack also  serves as a director of HCCH
Insurance Holdings, Inc., a  multinational insurance company  listed on The  New
York  Stock  Exchange.  Mr. Lack  has  been  involved in  a  number  of start-up
companies, both as an investor and as a director.
 
                                       28
<PAGE>
    ROBERT A.  RATLIFFE joined  the Company  as  a director  in July  1996.  Mr.
Ratliffe  has  been  Vice  President  and principal  of  Eagle  River,  Inc., an
investment  company  specializing  in  the  telecommunications  and   technology
sectors, and Vice President of Communications for Nextel Communications, Inc., a
wireless  telecommunications company, since  early 1996. Between  1986 and 1996,
Mr. Ratliffe served as Senior Vice President, Communications, for AT&T  Wireless
Services,  Inc., and its predecessor, McCaw Cellular Communications, Inc., where
he also served as Vice  President of External Affairs  and as Vice President  of
Acquisitions  and Development.  Prior to joining  McCaw Cellular Communications,
Inc., Mr. Ratliffe was a Vice President with Seafirst Bank.
 
    JACOB BROUWER joined the Company as a director in July 1996. Mr. Brouwer  is
the Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Brouwer Claims Canada & Co. Ltd., an
insurance adjusting company that he founded in 1956. Mr. Brouwer has served as a
director for numerous companies, including the
Canadian   National  Railway  Company,  The  Insurance  Corporation  of  British
Columbia, Air B.C., Golden Tulip Hotels  Ltd., and Northwestel Inc. Mr.  Brouwer
is  past President  of the  British Columbia  Adjusters Association,  and former
Chairman of the International Financial Centre of British Columbia. Mr.  Brouwer
currently  serves as a director of First  Interstate Bank of Canada and of Doman
Industries, a forest products company.
 
    RICHARD A.  COWELL joined  the Company  as a  director in  August 1996.  Mr.
Cowell  is a Senior Associate at Booz  Allen & Hamilton involved in, among other
things, the incorporation of simulation  and models into education and  training
programs  for Department of Defense contractors.  Prior to joining Booz Allen in
March of  1996, Mr.  Cowell  served in  the United  States  Army for  25  years.
Immediately prior to his retirement from the Army, Mr. Cowell served as Director
of  the Louisiana Maneuvers Task Force reporting directly to the Chief of Staff,
Army. Mr. Cowell has authored a number of articles relating to the future of the
Army and  received awards  for his  writing  and producing  of a  film  entitled
"America's  Army" in 1994. Mr. Cowell retired  from the Army holding the rank of
Colonel.
 
    Directors of  the Company  hold  office until  the  next annual  meeting  of
shareholders  or until  their successors have  been elected  and duly qualified.
Pursuant to the  1996 Independent  Director Stock  Plan, non-employee  directors
receive  an initial award of  500 shares of Common Stock  and an annual award of
Common Stock. See "--  Benefit Plans -- 1996  Independent Director Stock  Plan."
Non-employee  directors receive no salary for  their services and receive no fee
from the Company other than as described above for their participation at  Board
meetings.   All  directors  are  reimbursed  for  reasonable  travel  and  other
out-of-pocket expenses incurred in attending meetings of the Board of Directors.
 
    Executive officers are elected by the  Board of Directors of the Company  at
the  first meeting  after each  annual meeting  of shareholders  and hold office
until their successors are elected and duly qualified.
 
SIGNIFICANT EMPLOYEES
 
    TODD R. MCINTYRE joined the Company in January 1996 and currently serves  as
Vice  President of Business Development and  Director of Marketing. Mr. McIntyre
is responsible for  establishing relationships for  the development of  products
incorporating  the VRD technology.  Over the past eight  years, Mr. McIntyre has
held business development and marketing positions with several development stage
companies,  including  Southern  Limited   Partnership,  a  magazine  and   book
publisher;  Sasquatch Publishing Company,  Inc., a magazine  and book publisher;
SPRY Inc., an  Internet software products  publisher; and Notable  Technologies,
Inc., a wireless telecommunications products manufacturer.
 
    YOJI  D. YASKAWA joined  the Company in  March 1996 as  Director of Business
Development for Asia. Between January 1995 and February 1996, Mr. Yaskawa was  a
consultant  to AZCA,  Inc., a management  consulting firm, and  from August 1989
through July 1994, Mr. Yaskawa was Vice President and
 
                                       29
<PAGE>
Managing Director of Communication Intelligence Corporation ("CIC"), a  personal
computer  software vendor and operating system provider. Mr. Yaskawa also served
as a director of CIC's Japanese affiliate.
 
    ALEXANDER  J.  YARMIE  joined  the  Company  in  March  1996  as   Marketing
Manager/Defense   and  Aerospace,   and  is   responsible  for   developing  and
implementing the Company's military products  strategy. From July 1992 to  March
1996,  Mr. Yarmie was a principal  of Janan International, a business consulting
and product  representation  firm  that  advised  clients  in  the  electronics,
environmental  technologies, automotive,  aerospace, and  computer industries on
business development, sales  and marketing strategies.  Between August 1988  and
July  1992,  Mr.  Yarmie  was  a  marketing  and  sales  manager  for Sundstrand
Aerospace, an aerospace avionics and  electronics company. Mr. Yarmie  currently
holds  the rank of Major in the U.S. Army reserves, and is a Master Army Aviator
and a former military helicopter instructor.
 
    DAVID MELVILLE has agreed to join the Company as Senior Research Engineer in
September 1996. Mr. Melville currently is employed by the HIT Lab, where he  has
been  involved in developing the VRD technology, and is the inventor of the MRS.
Prior to joining the HIT Lab in 1994, Mr. Melville spent 12 years in engineering
positions with California State University,  Fresno, School of Engineering.  Mr.
Melville  has over 20 years of experience in electronics design and development.
Mr. Melville holds a B.S. in Physics from California State University, Fresno.
 
    DANIEL C. BERTOLET has  agreed to join the  Company as Research Engineer  in
September  1996.  Mr.  Bertolet  currently  is  employed  by  the  University of
Washington as a  Research Associate. Prior  to joining the  HIT Lab in  November
1994,  Mr. Bertolet was a Research  Associate with the University of Washington,
Department of Chemical  Engineering, and as  Senior Processing Engineering  with
United  Epitaxial  Technologies, where  he  worked on  the  commercialization of
semiconductor technologies. Mr. Bertolet holds a B.S. in Electrical  Engineering
and  a  Ph.D. in  Electrical  and Computer  Engineering  from the  University of
Massachusetts.
 
HIT LAB PERSONNEL
 
    DR. THOMAS A. FURNESS, III  has served as Director of  the HIT Lab and as  a
professor  of industrial engineering at the University of Washington since 1989.
Dr. Furness has substantial experience  in visual imaging systems, including  18
years  as Chief of  the Visual Display  Systems Branch of  the Human Engineering
Division  of  the  U.S.  Air   Force's  Armstrong  Aerospace  Medical   Research
Laboratory.  While with  the Air  Force, Dr.  Furness worked  extensively on the
Super Cockpit Program to develop and evaluate visual imaging systems designed to
deliver "heads-up"  targeting,  navigation,  threat  and  other  information  to
pilots.  Dr. Furness holds a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Duke University
and  a  Ph.D.  in  Engineering  and  Applied  Science  from  the  University  of
Southampton, England.
 
    RICHARD  S. JOHNSTON has more than 16 years of experience in the development
and commercialization  of  imaging technology  and  has served  as  Director  of
Engineering  at the HIT Lab since 1993.  From December 1992 to October 1993, Mr.
Johnston  was  Vice-President  of  Engineering  for  Virtual  Vision,  Inc.,   a
manufacturer of consumer and industrial display products. Between March 1989 and
December  1992, Mr.  Johnston was Director  of Engineering for  NeoPath, Inc., a
developer of medical analytical software, and  prior to 1989 he served as  Chief
Engineer  for Delta Graphics, Inc., a  producer of image generation systems. Mr.
Johnston also spent six  years at The Boeing  Company designing electronics  and
software  for digital signal processing  and computer image generation projects.
Mr. Johnston holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in Electrical Engineering from  Georgia
Institute of Technology.
 
                                       30
<PAGE>
EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION
 
    The following table sets forth the compensation received for services in all
capacities  to  the  Company for  the  last  three fiscal  years  by  Richard F.
Rutkowski,  the  Company's  Chief   Executive  Officer  and  President   ("Named
Executive").  No other officer of the Company received annual salary and bonuses
exceeding $100,000 in the fiscal year ended December 31, 1995.
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                        LONG-TERM
                                                                                                       COMPENSATION
                                                                    ANNUAL COMPENSATION                   AWARDS
                                                         -----------------------------------------  ------------------
NAME AND                                       FISCAL     SALARY      BONUS       OTHER ANNUAL          SECURITIES
PRINCIPAL POSITION                              YEAR        ($)        ($)     COMPENSATION ($)(1)  UNDERLYING OPTIONS
- --------------------------------------------  ---------  ---------  ---------  -------------------  ------------------
<S>                                           <C>        <C>        <C>        <C>                  <C>
Richard F. Rutkowski (2) ...................       1995     92,500     30,000          --                   --
  Chief Executive Officer                          1994     18,750     --                3,790              311,517
  and President                                    1993     --         --              --                   --
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1) Represents payments in consideration of consulting services rendered to  the
    Company prior to Mr. Rutkowski's employment with the Company.
 
(2) Mr. Rutkowski joined the Company as an employee on October 1, 1994. Pursuant
    to  his  Amended and  Restated Employment  Agreement  with the  Company, Mr.
    Rutkowski was granted  options to  purchase up  to an  aggregate of  311,517
    shares  of Common  Stock as  partial compensation  for calendar  years 1995,
    1996, and  1997.  See "--  Employment  Agreements." On  December  31,  1995,
    options  with respect to 115,814 shares of Common Stock had vested. Prior to
    his employment with the Company, Mr. Rutkowski served as a consultant to the
    Company.
 
    OPTION GRANTS.  No stock options or other similar rights were granted by the
Company during 1995 to the Named Executive.
 
    AGGREGATED OPTION EXERCISES IN LAST  FISCAL YEAR AND FISCAL YEAR-END  OPTION
VALUES.  The following table sets forth information concerning exercise of stock
options  during 1995  by the  Named Executive and  the fiscal  year-end value of
unexercised options:
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                            VALUE OF
                                                                                                           UNEXERCISED
                                                                                                           IN-THE-MONEY
                                                                                  NUMBER OF SECURITIES     OPTIONS
                                                                                 UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED    AT DECEMBER
                                                                                OPTIONS AT DECEMBER 31,        31,
                                                                                        1995 (#)           1995 ($) (1)
                                                                               --------------------------  -----------
<S>                                    <C>                      <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>
                                         SHARES ACQUIRED ON         VALUE
NAME                                        EXERCISE (#)          REALIZED     EXERCISABLE  UNEXERCISABLE  EXERCISABLE
- -------------------------------------  -----------------------  -------------  -----------  -------------  -----------
 
<CAPTION>
<S>                                    <C>                      <C>            <C>          <C>            <C>
Richard F. Rutkowski.................                --                  --       115,814        195,703   $   833,861
 
<CAPTION>
 
<S>                                    <C>
 
NAME                                   UNEXERCISABLE
- -------------------------------------  -------------
<S>                                    <C>
Richard F. Rutkowski.................   $   626,250
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
(1)  Calculated  based  on  the  initial  offering  price  of  $8.00  per   Unit
    (attributing  no  portion of  the value  of a  Unit to  a Warrant)  less the
    exercise price.
 
    EMPLOYMENT AGREEMENTS.   Pursuant  to his  Amended and  Restated  Employment
Agreement  with the  Company, Mr.  Rutkowski receives  an annual  base salary of
$120,000, subject to increases as determined  by the Board of Directors, and  an
annual  cash bonus  of $20,000. In  addition, Mr. Rutkowski  received options to
purchase up to an aggregate of 311,517 shares of Common Stock for his service to
the Company during the  period 1995 through 1997.  These options have  five-year
terms  and vest quarterly and will  immediately vest and become exercisable upon
the occurrence of  certain significant business  events, including a  sale of  a
majority  of the Company's assets to a third party. Mr. Rutkowski is entitled to
all benefits offered generally to the Company's employees. Upon any  termination
by the Company without cause, certain of Mr. Rutkowski's stock options will vest
and  Mr. Rutkowski  will be  entitled to  a severance  payment. The  Amended and
Restated Employment Agreement expires, unless previously terminated, on December
31, 1997.
 
    The Company entered into an employment agreement with Stephen R. Willey, the
Company's Executive Vice President and a director of the Company, effective  May
1, 1996. Pursuant to this
 
                                       31
<PAGE>
agreement,  Mr.  Willey receives  an annual  base  salary of  $110,000, adjusted
annually for the cost of  living and subject to  increases as determined by  the
Board  of Directors. In  addition, Mr. Willey  is entitled to  receive an annual
cash performance bonus in  an amount determined by  the Board of Directors,  and
has  received options to purchase an aggregate of 296,875 shares of Common Stock
for his services during  the period 1995 through  1998. Upon any termination  by
the  Company without cause, certain of Mr.  Willey's stock options will vest and
Mr. Willey will  be entitled  to a  severance payment.  Mr. Willey's  employment
agreement expires, unless previously terminated, on September 30, 1998.
 
BENEFIT PLANS
 
    1996  STOCK OPTION PLAN.   The Company's  1996 Stock Option  Plan (the "1996
Plan"), which was adopted by the Company's  Board of Directors on July 10,  1996
and  approved by the shareholders  on August 9, 1996,  provides for the grant of
options to  acquire a  maximum of  750,000 shares  of Common  Stock, subject  to
adjustments  in the  event of certain  changes in  the Company's capitalization.
Unless sooner terminated by the Board of Directors, the 1996 Plan will terminate
ten years after its adoption by the Board of Directors of the Company.
 
    The 1996 Plan permits the granting  of incentive stock options ("ISOs")  and
nonqualified  stock options ("NSOs")  at the discretion  of a plan administrator
(the  "Plan   Administrator").   The   Plan  Administrator   is   comprised   of
"disinterested  directors" and  "outside directors"  for purposes  of Rule 16b-3
under the  Exchange  Act  and  Section 162(m)  of  the  Internal  Revenue  Code,
respectively.  Subject to  the terms  of the  1996 Plan,  the Plan Administrator
determines the  terms  and conditions  of  any options  granted,  including  the
exercise  price.  Eligible optionees  include  any current  or  future employee,
officer, or agent  of the Company  or its subsidiaries.  The 1996 Plan  provides
that  the Plan Administrator must  establish an exercise price  for ISOs that is
not less than the fair market value of the shares at the date of grant. If  ISOs
are  granted to persons owning more than 10% of the voting stock of the Company,
however, the 1996 Plan provides  that the exercise price  must be not less  than
110%  of the fair market value  of the shares at the  date of grant and that the
term of  the ISOs  may not  exceed five  years. The  term of  all other  options
granted  under  the  1996 Plan  may  not  exceed ten  years.  Although  the Plan
Administrator determines when options become exercisable, options granted  under
the  1996 Plan  generally become exercisable  at a rate  of 33% per  year over a
three-year period, so that options are  fully vested after three years.  Options
are not transferable other than by will or the laws of descent and distribution,
and  each option is exercisable during the lifetime of the optionee only by such
optionee. In the event of a merger,  consolidation or plan of exchange to  which
the  Company is a party or  a sale of all or  substantially all of the Company's
assets, the Board of Directors may elect one of the following alternatives:  (i)
outstanding  options  remain  in effect  in  accordance with  their  terms; (ii)
outstanding options  may be  converted into  options to  purchase stock  in  the
surviving  or  acquiring corporation  in the  transaction; or  (iii) outstanding
options may be exercised with a 30-day  period prior to the consummation of  the
transaction,  at which  time they will  automatically expire, and  the Board may
accelerate the time frame for exercise of all options in full. Shares subject to
options granted under the 1996 Plan that have lapsed or terminated may again  be
made  subject to options  granted under the 1996  Plan. Following termination of
employment by  the  Company  other  than  for  cause,  resignation,  retirement,
disability  or death, an option holder has three months within which to exercise
his options before the options will automatically expire.
 
    1996 INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR STOCK PLAN.   The 1996 Independent Director  Stock
Plan  (the "Director Plan")  was adopted by  the Board of  Directors on July 10,
1996, and approved  by the shareholders  on August  9, 1996. A  total of  75,000
shares  of Common Stock have been reserved for issuance under the Director Plan.
The Director Plan  provides for  the grant  of shares  of Common  Stock to  non-
employee  directors ("Independent Directors") of  the Company. The Director Plan
is designed to work automatically without administration; however, to the extent
administration is necessary, it will be performed by the Board of Directors or a
committee thereof. The  Director Plan  is administered in  accordance with  Rule
16b-3 adopted under the Exchange Act.
 
                                       32
<PAGE>
    Each  Independent Director will receive 500 shares of Common Stock upon such
Independent  Director's  first  election  or  appointment  to  the  Board.  Each
Independent Director also will be awarded additional shares (the "Annual Award")
on an annual basis each time he or she is elected to the Board (or, if directors
are  elected to serve terms longer than one  year, as of the date of each annual
shareholders' meeting during  that term). The  number of shares  awarded in  the
Annual  Award will be  equivalent to the  result of $15,000  divided by the fair
market value of a  share on the date  of the award, rounded  to the nearest  100
shares  (or  a  fraction  thereof  if the  Independent  Director  is  elected or
appointed to  the  Board  at any  time  other  than at  the  annual  meeting  of
shareholders).  If any share awarded under  the Director Plan is forfeited, such
share will again be available for purposes of the Director Plan. Unless  earlier
suspended  or terminated by the Board, the Director Plan will continue in effect
until the earlier of: (i) ten years from the date on which it is adopted by  the
Board,  and (ii) the date  on which all shares  available for issuance under the
Director Plan have been issued.
 
    PRIOR PLANS.  The Company's 1993 Stock Option Plan, 1994 Combined  Incentive
and Nonqualified Stock Option Plan, and 1995 Combined Incentive and Nonqualified
Stock  Option Plan (the  "Prior Plans"), provided  for the award  of ISOs to key
employees and the award of NSOs to employees and certain non-employees who  have
important relationships with the Company. The Company reserved 228,938, 435,000,
and  625,000 authorized but unissued shares for issuance under each of the 1993,
1994, and 1995 plans, respectively, and as of July 10, 1996, options to purchase
an aggregate of 724,017  shares of Common Stock  remained outstanding under  the
respective plans. The Company does not intend to grant any additional options to
purchase  shares of Common Stock under the Prior Plans, and expects to terminate
the Prior Plans effective  immediately following the issuance  of the shares  of
Common Stock subject to the outstanding grants thereunder.
 
                                       33
<PAGE>
                             PRINCIPAL SHAREHOLDERS
 
    The  following table sets forth certain information regarding the beneficial
ownership of the Common Stock  as of July 10, 1996  by (i) each person known  by
the Company to own beneficially more than 5% of the Company's outstanding Common
Stock ("Principal Shareholder"); (ii) each of the Company's directors; (iii) the
Named Executive; and (iv) all executive officers and directors of the Company as
a group.
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                     PERCENTAGE OF
                                                                                                    COMMON STOCK (2)
                                                                                               --------------------------
<S>                                                                    <C>                     <C>           <C>
                                                                        AMOUNT AND NATURE OF
                                                                        BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP      BEFORE        AFTER
NAME AND ADDRESS OF BENEFICIAL OWNER                                            (1)              OFFERING      OFFERING
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------  ----------------------  ------------  ------------
 
<CAPTION>
<S>                                                                    <C>                     <C>           <C>
Richard F. Rutkowski (3) ............................................           191,077               5.5%          3.3%
  c/o Microvision, Inc.
  2203 Airport Way South, Suite 100
  Seattle, WA 98134
Stephen R. Willey (4) ...............................................           145,104               4.2%          2.6%
  c/o Microvision, Inc.
  2203 Airport Way South, Suite 100
  Seattle, WA 98134
Walter J. Lack (5) ..................................................           120,938               3.5%          2.1%
  10100 Santa Monica Blvd., 16th Floor
  Los Angeles, CA 90067
Robert A. Ratliffe ..................................................             6,250                 *             *
  2300 Carillon Point
  Kirkland, WA 98033
Richard A. Raisig ...................................................               625                 *             *
  515 East 72nd Street, #26J
  New York, NY 10021
Jacob Brouwer .......................................................            --                 --            --
  1200 West Pender Street, Suite 1200
  Vancouver, B.C.
  VGE 259
  Canada
Richard A. Cowell ...................................................            --                 --            --
  c/o Booz, Allen & Hamilton
  4301 N. Fairfax Drive, Suite 200
  Arlington, VA 22203
                                                                               --------               ---            --
All executive officers and directors as a group (7 persons)                     463,994              13.4%          8.1%
</TABLE>
 
- ------------------------
*   Less than 1% of the outstanding shares of Common Stock.
 
(1)  Shares not outstanding but deemed beneficially owned by virtue of the right
    of an individual to acquire them  within 60 days are treated as  outstanding
    for  determining the  amount and  percentage of  Common Stock  owned by such
    individual. To the Company's knowledge, each person has sole voting and sole
    investment power  with respect  to the  shares shown,  subject to  community
    property laws, where applicable.
 
(2)  Rounded to the nearest 1/10th of  one percent, based on 3,461,546 shares of
    Common Stock outstanding before this offering and 5,711,546 shares of Common
    Stock  outstanding  after  this  offering,  assuming  no  exercise  of   the
    Overallotment  Option, the  Warrants, the Representatives'  Warrants, or any
    other  outstanding  options   or  warrants,  assuming   no  conversions   or
    redemptions  of any of the  7% Notes and no  redemption of fractional shares
    resulting from  the  reverse stock  split,  and excluding  the  Stoel  Rives
    Shares.
 
(3) Includes options to purchase up to 189,203 shares of Common Stock.
 
(4) Includes options to purchase up to 136,719 shares of Common Stock.
 
(5)  Excludes shares  of Common  Stock that may  be received  upon conversion or
    redemption of any 7% Notes.
 
                                       34
<PAGE>
                              CERTAIN TRANSACTIONS
 
    Since inception of the Company, there  has not been, nor is there  currently
proposed, any transaction or series of similar transactions to which the Company
was  or is to  be a party  in which the  amount involved exceeds  $60,000 and in
which any director or executive  officer had or will  have a direct or  indirect
material interest other than the transactions described below.
 
SECURITIES ISSUANCES
 
    From  November  1995 through  June 1996,  the Company  sold an  aggregate of
859,776 shares of  the Company's  Series A Preferred  Stock to  58 entities  and
individuals  for an aggregate purchase price  of $4,127,000 in cash. In February
1996, Walter J.  Lack, a  director of the  Company, purchased  15,625 shares  of
Series A Preferred Stock for $75,000 in cash.
 
    In  early  July 1996,  the Company  issued  $750,000 in  aggregate principal
amount of its 7% Notes to six investors raising net proceeds of $707,500 for the
Company's immediate operating requirements and  for payment of certain  expenses
in  connection with this offering. The 7%  Notes may be converted or redeemed at
the option of the holder at any time 90 days after the date of this  Prospectus.
The  7% Notes bear interest at the rate of 7% per annum, payable semiannually in
arrears on December 15  and June 15, and  will mature on July  10, 1997. The  7%
Notes  are subordinate  to all  future senior  indebtedness of  the Company. The
shares of Common  Stock issuable  upon any conversion  or redemption  of the  7%
Notes  are being registered for resale pursuant to the Registration Statement of
which this Prospectus  is a part.  Walter J.  Lack, a director  of the  Company,
purchased $250,000 in principal amount of the 7% Notes.
 
PROMOTERS' TRANSACTIONS
 
    The  Company  was  founded and  promoted  by Times  Holding  Limited; Sisley
Enterprises S.A.; Yokohama  Enterprises, Inc.; George  Hatch; the Hunter  Family
Trust  No. 2;  Caisey Harlingten;  Ronetna Limited;  and Dunbrody International,
Ltd. (each individually, a "Promoter"  and all, collectively, the  "Promoters").
In  July 1993, an aggregate  of 1,893,750 shares of  Common Stock were issued by
the Company to the Promoters for an aggregate purchase price of $212,100. On May
28, 1996,  the Company  repurchased  859,375 shares  of  Common Stock  from  the
Promoters.   Consideration  for  such  purchase  included  the  cancellation  of
promissory notes from the Promoters in an aggregate principal amount of  $66,600
and  the reduction in the exercise price of warrants previously granted to them,
which were subsequently  exercised, to  purchase 96,875 shares  of Common  Stock
from $0.80 to zero.
 
    Effective  January 1, 1994,  the Company entered  into consulting agreements
with David L. Hunter and Caisey  Harlingten, Promoters of the Company.  Pursuant
to  the  agreements,  Messrs.  Hunter  and  Harlingten  each  provided  business
development and strategic  planning services  to the Company,  and assisted  the
Company   with  its  financing  activities   and  provided  general  management,
marketing, development and investment assistance to the Company. Messrs.  Hunter
and  Harlingten were paid $90,018 and $88,000 under their respective agreements,
which terminated in November 1994 and February 1995, respectively.
 
CONSULTING ARRANGEMENTS
 
    Effective January 1, 1994, the  Company entered into a consulting  agreement
with  Dr. Thomas A. Furness,  III, who at the time  was chairman of a scientific
advisory board to the Company. Pursuant  to the agreement, Dr. Furness  provided
strategic  planning and  technical advice to  the Company. Dr.  Furness was paid
$55,000 under the  agreement. The  advisory board of  the Company  has not  been
active since June 1995.
 
    In  December 1993, the Company authorized a consulting agreement with Walter
J. Lack, a director of the Company, pursuant to which Mr. Lack provided business
consulting services  to the  Company. As  compensation for  these services,  the
Company  issued Mr. Lack warrants to purchase 3,125 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $3.52 per share. In June 1996, Mr. Lack received 833 shares of
common stock  upon  the exercise  of  such warrants.  The  consulting  agreement
between the Company and Mr. Lack terminated on December 31, 1994.
 
                                       35
<PAGE>
    Between  December 1993 and October 1995,  two entities with which Stephen R.
Willey is  affiliated  provided  strategic  planning  and  technical  consulting
services to the Company. As compensation for these services, the Company paid an
aggregate of $137,092 to these entities. The consulting relationship between the
Company  and the affiliates terminated in October 1995, at which time Mr. Willey
became an employee of the Company.
 
                                       36
<PAGE>
                           DESCRIPTION OF SECURITIES
 
    The authorized capital stock of the Company consists of 31,250,000 shares of
Common  Stock, no par value per share, and 31,250,000 shares of Preferred Stock,
no par value per share.
 
UNITS
 
    The Common Stock and the Warrants offered hereby will be sold only in Units.
Each Unit consists  of one share  of Common  Stock and one  Warrant. The  Common
Stock  and  Warrants  that comprise  the  Units will  separate  immediately upon
issuance and will trade only as separate securities.
 
COMMON STOCK
 
    As of July 10, 1996, there were 2,601,770 shares of Common Stock outstanding
held of record by 113 shareholders. Holders of Common Stock are entitled to  one
vote  per share on all  matters submitted to a vote  of shareholders and may not
cumulate votes for the election of  directors. Holders of Common Stock also  are
entitled  to receive ratably such  dividends as may be  declared by the Board of
Directors out of funds legally  available therefor, subject to preferences  that
may  be  applicable to  any outstanding  Preferred  Stock. In  the event  of the
liquidation, dissolution or winding up of  the Company, holders of Common  Stock
are  entitled  to  share  ratably  in  all  assets  remaining  after  payment of
liabilities and the liquidation preference  of any outstanding Preferred  Stock.
Holders  of  Common  Stock  have  no  preemptive,  subscription,  redemption  or
conversion rights.  All the  outstanding shares  of Common  Stock are,  and  all
shares  of Common Stock to be outstanding  upon completion of this offering will
be, fully paid and nonassessable.
 
PREFERRED STOCK
 
    The Board of  Directors has  the authority,  without further  action by  the
shareholders, to issue up to 31,250,000 shares of Preferred Stock in one or more
series   and  to  fix  the   powers,  designations,  preferences  and  relative,
participating, optional  or other  rights  thereof, including  dividend  rights,
conversion  rights,  voting rights,  redemption terms,  liquidation preferences,
sinking fund  terms  and the  number  of  shares constituting  any  series.  The
issuance  of Preferred  Stock in  certain circumstances  may have  the effect of
delaying, deferring  or preventing  a  change of  control  of the  Company,  may
discourage  bids for  the Company's  Common Stock at  a premium  over the market
price of the Common Stock, and may adversely affect the market price of, and the
voting and other rights of the holders of, the Common Stock.
 
    Upon the  consummation of  this offering,  the 859,776  shares of  Series  A
Preferred Stock outstanding as of July 10, 1996, will be converted automatically
into  an equal number of shares of  Common Stock. No Preferred Stock will remain
outstanding immediately  after this  offering. At  present, the  Company has  no
plans to issue any additional shares of Preferred Stock.
 
WARRANTS
 
    REPRESENTATIVES'  WARRANTS.  In  connection with this  offering, the Company
has authorized the issuance  of the Representatives'  Warrants and has  reserved
for  issuance and registered for resale  356,150 shares of Common Stock issuable
upon exercise of such warrants (including the Warrants issuable upon exercise of
the Representatives' Warrants). The  Representatives' Warrants will entitle  the
holders  to acquire 178,075  Units at an  exercise price of  $9.60 per Unit. The
Representatives' Warrants  will  be  exercisable  at any  time  from  the  first
anniversary  of the date of  this Prospectus until the  fifth anniversary of the
date of this Prospectus. The Company  has agreed that during the period  between
the first anniversary and fifth anniversary after the date of this Prospectus it
will   maintain  an  effective  registration  statement  with  respect  to  such
securities so  as  to  permit  their public  resale  without  restriction.  This
obligation  could result in substantial future  expense to the Company and could
adversely affect  the  Company's  ability  to complete  future  equity  or  debt
financings.  Furthermore, the  sale of  Common Stock of  the Company  held by or
issuable to the Representatives or even the potential of such sales, could  have
an adverse effect on the market price of the securities offered hereby.
 
                                       37
<PAGE>
    UNIT  WARRANTS.  Each Warrant will entitle  the holder to purchase one share
of Common Stock at a price of $12.00 per share, subject to certain  adjustments.
The  Warrants will,  subject to certain  conditions, be exercisable  at any time
until the  fifth anniversary  of the  date of  this Prospectus,  unless  earlier
redeemed.  The outstanding Warrants  are redeemable by the  Company, at $.25 per
Warrant, upon at least 30 days  prior written notice to the registered  holders,
if  the closing bid price (as defined  in the Warrant Agreement described below)
per share  of  Common  Stock  for  each  of  the  20  consecutive  trading  days
immediately  preceding the date notice of  redemption is given equals or exceeds
200% of the  exercise price of  a Warrant. If  the Company gives  notice of  its
intention  to redeem,  a holder would  be forced  either to exercise  his or her
Warrants before  the date  specified  in the  redemption  notice or  accept  the
redemption price.
 
    The  Warrants will  be issued in  registered form under  a Warrant Agreement
(the "Warrant  Agreement") between  the Company  and American  Stock Transfer  &
Trust  Company, as  warrant agent  (the "Warrant  Agent"). The  shares of Common
Stock underlying the Warrants, when issued  upon exercise of a Warrant, will  be
fully paid and nonassessable, and the Company will pay any transfer tax incurred
as a result of the issuance of Common Stock to the holder upon its exercise.
 
    The  Warrants  and  the Representatives'  Warrants  contain  provisions that
protect the holders against dilution by  adjustment of the exercise price.  Such
adjustment will occur in the event, among others, that the Company makes certain
distributions  to holders of  its Common Stock.  The Company is  not required to
issue fractional  shares upon  the  exercise of  a Warrant  or  Representatives'
Warrants.  The holder of a Warrant  or Representatives' Warrant will not possess
any rights  as a  shareholder of  the Company  until such  holder exercises  the
Warrant or Representatives' Warrant.
 
    A  Warrant may be exercised upon surrender  of the Warrant Certificate on or
before the expiration date of the Warrant  at the offices of the Warrant  Agent,
with  the form  of "Election  To Purchase"  on the  reverse side  of the Warrant
Certificate completed and executed as  indicated, accompanied by payment of  the
exercise  price (by certified or bank check payable to the order of the Company)
for the number of shares with respect to which the Warrant is being exercised.
 
    For a holder to exercise the Warrants, there must be a current  registration
statement  in  effect  with the  Commission  and qualification  in  effect under
applicable  state  securities   laws  (or  applicable   exemptions  from   state
qualification  requirements) with  respect to  the issuance  of shares  or other
securities  underlying  the  Warrants.  The  Company  has  agreed  to  use   all
commercially  reasonable efforts to cause  a registration statement with respect
to such securities to be filed under the Securities Act and to become and remain
effective in anticipation of and  prior to the exercise  of the Warrants and  to
take  such other actions under the laws of  various states as may be required to
cause the sale of Common Stock  (or other securities) upon exercise of  Warrants
to be lawful. If a current registration statement is not in effect at the time a
Warrant is exercised, the Company may at its option redeem the Warrant by paying
to  the holder  cash equal  to the  difference between  the market  price of the
Common Stock on the  exercise date and  the exercise price  of the Warrant.  The
Company  will  not be  required to  honor the  exercise of  Warrants if,  in the
opinion of the Company's Board of Directors upon advice of counsel, the sale  of
securities upon exercise would be unlawful.
 
    The foregoing discussion of certain terms and provisions of the Warrants and
Representatives'  Warrants  is qualified  in its  entirety  by reference  to the
detailed provisions of the Warrant Agreement and Representatives' Warrants,  the
form of each of which has been filed as an exhibit to the Registration Statement
of which this Prospectus is a part.
 
    For  the life  of the  Warrants and  Representatives' Warrants,  the holders
thereof have the opportunity to  profit from a rise in  the market price of  the
Common  Stock without  assuming the  risk of ownership  of the  shares of Common
Stock issuable upon  the exercise of  the Warrants. The  Warrant holders may  be
expected  to exercise their  Warrants at a  time when the  Company would, in all
likelihood, be able to obtain any needed capital by an offering of Common  Stock
on  terms more favorable than  those provided for by  the Warrants. Further, the
terms on which the  Company could obtain additional  capital during the life  of
the Warrants may be adversely affected.
 
                                       38
<PAGE>
    OTHER  WARRANTS.  As of July 10,  1996, the Company had outstanding warrants
to purchase 217,963 shares  of Common Stock. Warrants  to purchase 4,063  shares
are  immediately exercisable at  an exercise price  of $4.80 per  share and will
expire in 2001. Warrants to purchase 156,608 shares are immediately  exercisable
at  an exercise price  of $6.40 per share  and will expire  in 2001. Warrants to
purchase 41,666 shares are immediately exercisable at an exercise price of $8.00
per share and will expire at various times between 2000 and 2001.
 
STOCK OPTIONS
 
    The Company has reserved  825,000 shares for issuance  upon the exercise  of
options  granted under the 1996 Stock  Option Plan and 1996 Independent Director
Stock Plan. As of July  10, 1996, the Company  had stock options outstanding  to
purchase  up to 971,205 shares  of Common Stock at  exercise prices ranging from
$0.80 to $8.80 per share. These options were granted under the 1996 Stock Option
Plan and the Company's prior Stock Option Plans. As of July 10, 1996, options to
purchase 368,812  shares  were exercisable,  of  which 216,855  will  expire  on
January 1, 2001. The remaining outstanding options will vest, if at all, through
1999  and will expire during  the period between January  1, 2002 and January 1,
2005.
 
CERTAIN FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
 
    The  following  discussion  sets  forth  certain  U.S.  federal  income  tax
consequences,  under current law, relating to  the purchase and ownership of the
Units and the Common Stock and  Warrants constituting the Units. The  discussion
is  a summary and does not purport to  deal with all aspects of federal taxation
that may be applicable to an investor,  nor does it consider specific facts  and
circumstances  that may  be relevant  to a  particular investor's  tax position.
Certain holders (such as dealers in securities, insurance companies, tax  exempt
organizations,  and those holding Common Stock or Warrants as part of a straddle
or hedge transaction) may be subject to special rules that are not addressed  in
this  discussion. This discussion is based on current provisions of the Code and
on administrative and  judicial interpretations as  of the date  hereof, all  of
which  are  subject to  change  retroactively and  prospectively.  ALL INVESTORS
SHOULD CONSULT THEIR  OWN TAX ADVISORS  AS TO THE  SPECIFIC TAX CONSEQUENCES  TO
THEM  OF THIS OFFERING, INCLUDING THE APPLICABILITY OF FEDERAL, STATE, LOCAL AND
FOREIGN TAX LAWS.
 
    ALLOCATION OF PURCHASE PRICE.   Each Unit as a whole  will have a tax  basis
equal  to the  cost of  the Unit.  The measure  of income  or loss  from certain
transactions described below depends upon the  tax basis in each of the  Warrant
and the Common Stock comprising each Unit. The tax basis for each of the Warrant
and the Common Stock will be determined by allocating the cost of the Unit among
the securities which comprise the Unit in proportion to the relative fair market
values of those elements at the time of acquisition.
 
U.S. HOLDERS OF COMMON STOCK OR WARRANTS
 
    The  following  discussion concerns  the  material U.S.  federal  income tax
consequences of  the  ownership and  disposition  of Common  Stock  or  Warrants
applicable  to a  U.S. Holder of  such Common  Stock or Warrants.  In general, a
"U.S. Holder" is (i) a  citizen or resident of the  U.S., (ii) a corporation  or
partnership  created or organized in  the U.S. or under the  laws of the U.S. or
any state, or  (iii) an  estate or  trust whose  income is  includable in  gross
income for U.S. federal income tax purposes regardless of its source.
 
    DIVIDENDS.   Dividends,  if any,  paid to  a U.S.  Holder generally  will be
includable in the gross  income of such  U.S. Holder as  ordinary income to  the
extent  of  such U.S.  Holder's share  of the  Company's current  or accumulated
earnings and profits. See "Dividend Policy."
 
    SALE OF COMMON STOCK.  The sale  of Common Stock should generally result  in
the  recognition of gain or loss to a  U.S. Holder thereof in an amount equal to
the difference between the amount realized  and such U.S. Holder's tax basis  in
the    Common   Stock.   If    the   Common   Stock    constitutes   a   capital
 
                                       39
<PAGE>
asset in the hands of a  U.S. Holder, gain or loss  upon the sale of the  Common
Stock  will be  characterized as long-term  or short-term capital  gain or loss,
depending on whether the Common Stock has been held for more than one year.
 
    EXERCISE AND SALE OF WARRANTS.  No gain or loss will be recognized by a U.S.
Holder of a Warrant on the purchase of shares of Common Stock for cash  pursuant
to  an exercise of a Warrant (except that  gain will be recognized to the extent
cash is received in lieu  of fractional shares). The  tax basis of Common  Stock
received  upon the exercise of a Warrant will equal the sum of the U.S. Holder's
tax basis for the exercised Warrant  and the exercise price. The holding  period
of  the Common Stock acquired upon the exercise of the Warrant will begin on the
date the Warrant is exercised and the  Common Stock is purchased (i.e., it  does
not include the period during which the Warrant was held).
 
    Gain or loss from the sale or other disposition of a Warrant (or loss in the
event  that  the Warrant  expires unexercised  as  discussed below),  other than
pursuant to a redemption  by the Company,  will be capital gain  or loss to  its
U.S.  Holder if the Common Stock to which  the Warrant relates would have been a
capital asset in the  hands of such  holder. Such capital gain  or loss will  be
long-term  capital gain or loss if the U.S. Holder has held the Warrant for more
than one year  at the  time of  the sale, disposition  or lapse.  It is  unclear
whether  the redemption of a  Warrant by the Company  would generate ordinary or
capital income or loss.
 
    EXPIRATION OF WARRANTS WITHOUT EXERCISE.  If a holder of a Warrant allows it
to expire without exercise, the expiration will be treated as a sale or exchange
of the Warrant on the expiration date. The U.S. Holder will have a taxable  loss
equal  to the amount of  such U.S. Holder's tax basis  in the lapsed Warrant. If
the Warrant constitutes a capital  asset in the hands  of the U.S. Holder,  such
taxable  loss  will be  characterized as  long-term  or short-term  capital loss
depending upon whether the Warrant was  held for the required long-term  holding
period.
 
    BACKUP  WITHHOLDING.  A shareholder  who is a U.S.  Holder may be subject to
backup withholding at the rate of 31% in connection with distributions  received
with  respect to his or her shares,  unless the shareholder (i) is a corporation
or comes within certain other exempt categories and, when required, demonstrates
this fact or (ii) provides  a correct taxpayer identification number,  certifies
as  to no loss of  exemption for backup withholding  and otherwise complies with
applicable requirements  of the  backup withholding  rules. Any  amount paid  as
backup  withholding  will be  creditable against  such shareholder's  income tax
liability. The Company will report to the shareholders and the I.R.S. the amount
of any "reportable payments" distributed and the amount of tax withheld, if any,
with respect to the shares.
 
NON-U.S. HOLDERS OF COMMON STOCK OR WARRANTS
 
    The following  discussion  concerns the  material  U.S. federal  income  and
estate  tax consequences  of the ownership  and disposition of  shares of Common
Stock or Warrants applicable to Non-U.S. Holders of such shares of Common  Stock
or  Warrants. In general,  a "Non-U.S. Holder"  is any holder  other than a U.S.
Holder, as defined in the preceding section.
 
    DIVIDENDS.  Dividends, if any, paid  to a Non-U.S. Holder generally will  be
subject  to  U.S. withholding  tax at  a 30%  rate (or  a lower  rate as  may be
prescribed by an  applicable tax  treaty) unless the  dividends are  effectively
connected  with a  trade or  business of the  Non-U.S. Holder  within the United
States. See "Dividend Policy." Dividends effectively connected with such a trade
or business will generally not be subject to withholding (if the Non-U.S. Holder
properly files an executed  IRS Form 4224  with the payor  of the dividend)  and
generally will be subject to federal income tax on a net income basis at regular
graduated  rates. In the case of a  Non-U.S. Holder which is a corporation, such
effectively connected  income also  may be  subject to  the branch  profits  tax
(which  is generally imposed  on a foreign corporation  on the repatriation from
the United States  of effectively  connected earnings and  profits). The  branch
profits  tax may not apply  if the recipient is  a qualified resident of certain
countries with which the  United States has an  income tax treaty. To  determine
the  applicability of a  tax treaty providing  for a lower  rate of withholding,
dividends paid to an address in a foreign country
 
                                       40
<PAGE>
are presumed, under the  current I.R.S. position,  to be paid  to a resident  of
that  country, unless the payor had  definite knowledge that such presumption is
not warranted  or  an  applicable  tax  treaty  (or  U.S.  Treasury  Regulations
thereunder)  requires  some other  method  for determining  a  Non-U.S. Holder's
treaty status.  The Company  must report  annually  to the  I.R.S. and  to  each
Non-U.S.  Holder the  amount of  dividends paid  to, and  the tax  withheld with
respect to, each Non-U.S. Holder. These reporting requirements apply  regardless
of  whether withholding was  reduced or eliminated by  an applicable tax treaty.
Copies of  these  information returns  also  may  be made  available  under  the
provisions  of a  specific treaty  or agreement  to the  tax authorities  in the
country in which the Non-U.S. Holder resides.
 
    SALE OF COMMON STOCK.  Generally, a  Non-U.S. Holder will not be subject  to
U.S.  federal  income tax  on any  gain  realized upon  the disposition  of such
holder's shares of  Common Stock unless  (i) the gain  is effectively  connected
with  a trade or  business carried on  by the Non-U.S.  Holder within the United
States (in  which case  the branch  profits tax  may apply);  (ii) the  Non-U.S.
Holder  is an individual who holds the shares of Common Stock as a capital asset
and is present in the United States for 183 days or more in the taxable year  of
the  disposition and to whom such gain is U.S. source; (iii) the Non-U.S. Holder
is subject to  tax pursuant  to the  provisions of  U.S. tax  law applicable  to
certain  former U.S. citizens or residents; or (iv) the Company is or has been a
"U.S. real property holding  corporation" for U.S.  federal income tax  purposes
(which  the Company does not believe  that it is or is  likely to become) at any
time during the  five-year period  ending on the  date of  disposition (or  such
shorter  period that such shares were  held) and, subject to certain exceptions,
the Non-U.S. Holder  held, directly or  indirectly, more than  5% of the  Common
Stock.
 
    EXERCISE  AND SALE OF WARRANTS.  Generally, a Non-U.S. Holder who recognizes
capital gain from the sale of a Warrant, other than pursuant to a redemption  by
the  Company, will not be subject to U.S. federal income tax unless (i) the gain
is effectively connected  with a trade  or business carried  on by the  Non-U.S.
Holder  within  the United  States (in  which  case the  branch profits  tax may
apply); (ii) the Non-U.S. Holder is an  individual who is present in the  United
States  for 183 days or more in the taxable year of sale and to whom the gain is
U.S. source;  (iii)  the Non-U.S.  Holder  is subject  to  tax pursuant  to  the
provisions  of U.S. law applicable to certain former U.S. citizens or residents;
or (iv) the Company is  or has been a  "U.S. real property holding  corporation"
for  U.S. federal income tax purposes (which  the Company does not believe it is
or is likely to become)  at any time during the  five-year period ending on  the
date  of sale (or such  shorter period such Warrants  were held) and, subject to
certain exceptions, the Non-U.S. Holder  held, directly or indirectly more  than
5% of the Warrants.
 
    ESTATE  TAX.  Shares of Common Stock  and Warrants owned or treated as owned
by an individual who is not a citizen or resident (as specially defined for U.S.
federal estate tax purposes) of the United  States at the time of death will  be
includable  in  the  individual's  gross  estate  for  U.S.  federal  estate tax
purposes, unless an applicable tax treaty provides otherwise, and may be subject
to U.S. federal estate tax.
 
    BACKUP WITHHOLDING AND  INFORMATION REPORTING.   Under current U.S.  federal
income  tax law,  backup withholding tax  (which generally is  a withholding tax
imposed at the rate of 31% on  certain payments to persons that fail to  furnish
certain  required information)  and information  reporting apply  to payments of
dividends (actual and constructive) made to certain non-corporate U.S.  persons.
The  backup withholding tax and information reporting requirements applicable to
U.S. persons will generally  not apply to  dividends paid on  Common Stock to  a
Non-U.S. Holder at an address outside the United States, although dividends paid
to  Non-U.S.  Holders  will  be  reported and  taxed  as  described  above under
"Dividends."
 
    The payment of the proceeds from  the disposition of shares of Common  Stock
or  Warrants through the U.S. office of  a broker will be subject to information
reporting and backup withholding unless the holder, under penalties of  perjury,
certifies,  among other  things, its  status as  a Non-U.S.  Holder or otherwise
establishes an  exemption.  Generally, the  payment  of the  proceeds  from  the
disposition  of shares  of Common  Stock or  Warrants to  or through  a non-U.S.
office of a broker will not
 
                                       41
<PAGE>
be subject  to  backup  withholding  and will  not  be  subject  to  information
reporting. In the case of the payment of proceeds from the disposition of shares
of Common Stock or Warrants through a non-U.S. office of a broker that is a U.S.
person  or  a "U.S.-related  person,"  existing regulations  require information
reporting (but not backup withholding) on the payment unless the broker receives
a statement from the owner, signed under penalties of perjury, certifying, among
other things, its  status as  a non-U.S. Holder  or the  broker has  documentary
evidence  in its files that the owner is a Non-U.S. Holder and the broker has no
actual knowledge to the contrary. For  this purpose, a "U.S.-related person"  is
(i)  a "controlled foreign corporation" for  U.S. federal income tax purposes or
(ii) a foreign person 50% or more of whose gross income from all sources for the
three-year period  ending with  the  close of  its  taxable year  preceding  the
payment  (or for such part of the period  that the broker has been in existence)
is derived from activities that are effectively connected with the conduct of  a
U.S. trade or business.
 
    Any  amounts withheld from a  payment to a Non-U.S.  Holder under the backup
withholding rules will be allowed as a credit against such holder's U.S. federal
income tax liability and may entitle such holder to a refund, provided that  the
required information is furnished to the U.S. Internal Revenue Service. Non-U.S.
Holders  should consult  their tax advisors  regarding the  application of these
rules to their particular situations, the availability of an exemption therefrom
and the procedure for obtaining such an exemption, if available.
 
REGISTRATION RIGHTS
 
    The Company has agreed  to register an additional  210,000 shares of  Common
Stock  pursuant to the  Registration Statement of which  this Prospectus forms a
part, for sale by certain holders of the Company's Common Stock and the 7% Notes
(the "Selling Shareholders"). Of the  additional 210,000 shares of Common  Stock
being  registered, 135,000 shares are issuable in connection with conversions or
redemptions of the  7% Notes. The  7% Notes  may be converted  or redeemed,  and
shares  of Common Stock issuable  upon any such conversion  or redemption may be
sold, commencing 90 days after the date of this Prospectus. The remaining 75,000
shares of  Common  Stock  are being  registered  on  behalf of  certain  of  the
Promoters  of the Company.  The Company will  not receive any  proceeds from the
market sales of the  Common Stock by  the Selling Shareholders  and the sale  of
such  shares  will  not  be  included  in  the  offering  of  the  Units  by the
Underwriters. See "Risk Factors -- Shares Eligible for Future Sale."
 
WASHINGTON ANTI-TAKEOVER STATUTE
 
    Washington's "Significant Business Transactions Statute" (Chapter 23B.19  of
the  Washington Business Corporation Act) applies to all Washington corporations
that have a class of  voting shares registered pursuant to  section 12 or 15  of
the  Exchange Act.  The Company  plans to  register the  Common Stock  under the
Exchange Act as  of the effective  date of the  Registration Statement of  which
this Prospectus is a part. Subject to certain exceptions, the Washington statute
prohibits   a  corporation   from  entering   into  any   "significant  business
transactions" with  an "Acquiring  Person"  (defined generally  as a  person  or
affiliated  group that beneficially  owns 10% or more  of the outstanding voting
securities of a corporation)  for a period  of five years  after such person  or
affiliated  group becomes  an Acquiring Person  unless a majority  of the target
corporation's directors  approves,  prior  to the  acquisition  of  shares  that
establishes  the purchaser as an Acquiring  Person, the transaction or the share
acquisition. In addition, Chapter 23B.19 prohibits a corporation subject thereto
from entering into a significant  business transaction with an Acquiring  Person
unless  the consideration  to be received  by the  corporation's shareholders in
connection  with  such   transaction  satisfies  the   statute's  "fair   price"
provisions.
 
TRANSFER AGENT AND REGISTRAR
 
    The  transfer agent and  registrar for the  Company's securities is American
Stock Transfer & Trust Company.
 
                                       42
<PAGE>
                        SHARES ELIGIBLE FOR FUTURE SALE
 
    Prior to  this offering,  there has  been no  public market  for the  Units,
Common  Stock or Warrants. No prediction can be made of the effect, if any, that
future market sales of shares of Common Stock or the availability of such shares
for sale will have on the prevailing market price of the Common Stock  following
this  offering. The Company is unable to estimate the number of such shares that
may be sold in the public market, because such amount will depend on the trading
volume in, and the market  price for, the Common  Stock, the Warrants and  other
factors.  Nevertheless, sales of substantial amounts  of such shares in the open
market following  this offering  could adversely  affect the  prevailing  market
price of the Common Stock and the Warrants.
 
    Upon  completion  of  this  offering,  the  Company  will  have  outstanding
5,711,546 shares  of Common  Stock (assuming  no exercise  of the  Overallotment
Option,  the  Warrants,  the Representatives'  Warrants,  any  other outstanding
options or warrants, and  no conversion or  redemption of any  of the 7%  Notes,
issuance  of  the  Stoel Rives  Shares  or  redemption of  a  nominal  number of
fractional shares to  occur following  the reverse stock  split). The  2,250,000
shares  of Common Stock that are included in the Units and sold in this offering
(plus up to  337,500 shares  that may be  sold as  a result of  exercise of  the
Overallotment  Option), and the  2,250,000 shares of  Common Stock issuable upon
exercise of the Warrants (plus up  to 337,500 shares issuable upon the  exercise
of Warrants subject to the Overallotment Option) and the Stoel Rives Shares will
be  freely tradeable  without restriction  under the  Securities Act immediately
upon completion of this offering. An  additional 210,000 shares of Common  Stock
being  registered on  behalf of  the Selling  Shareholders will  be eligible for
resale by the Selling Shareholders without restriction under the Securities  Act
90  days after the date of this  Prospectus. However, any shares purchased by an
"affiliate" of  the Company  (as that  term is  defined in  Rule 144  under  the
Securities  Act), subject to  certain conditions, will be  subject to the resale
limitations of Rule 144.
 
    The remaining  3,386,546  shares of  Common  Stock are  "restricted"  shares
subject to restrictions upon resale under Rule 144 under the Securities Act (the
"Restricted Shares"). Of this number, 463,994 shares of Common Stock are subject
to  an agreement between  the Underwriters and certain  shareholders not to sell
such shares until 12 months after the date of this Prospectus.
 
    In general under  Rule 144 as  currently in effect,  any person (or  persons
whose shares are aggregated) who has beneficially owned Restricted Shares for at
least two years, is entitled to sell, within any three-month period, a number of
shares that does not exceed the greater of (i) 1% of the then outstanding shares
of  the Company's  Common Stock  (approximately 57,115  shares immediately after
this offering) or (ii) the average weekly trading volume of the Company's Common
Stock during the  four calendar weeks  immediately preceding the  date on  which
notice  of the sale is filed with  the Securities and Exchange Commission. Sales
pursuant to Rule 144 also are subject to certain requirements relating to manner
of sale,  notice  and  availability  of current  public  information  about  the
Company.  A person who is not deemed to have been an affiliate of the Company at
any time  during the  three  months immediately  preceding  the sale  and  whose
Restricted  Shares have been fully  paid for three years  since the later of the
date on which they were  acquired from the Company or  from an affiliate of  the
Company  may sell such Restricted Shares under Rule 144(k) without regard to the
limitations and requirements described above.
 
    Commencing approximately 12 months after the date of this Prospectus, up  to
356,150  shares  of  Common  Stock  that  are  issuable  upon  exercise  of  the
Representatives' Warrants (including exercise of the warrants included  therein)
will  be  eligible  for resale  without  restriction under  the  Securities Act.
Following this offering, the  Company intends to  file a registration  statement
under  the Securities Act to register  approximately 825,000 shares reserved for
issuance under the Company's 1996 Stock  Plans and 724,017 shares issuable  upon
exercise  of options granted  under the Company's prior  stock option plans. See
"Management -- Benefit Plans," "Description of Securities" and "Underwriting."
 
                                       43
<PAGE>
                                  UNDERWRITING
 
    The Underwriters  named below,  acting through  Paulson Investment  Company,
Inc.  and marion bass  securities corporation, as  Representatives, have agreed,
severally and not jointly, subject to  the terms and conditions contained in  an
Underwriting  Agreement to be dated the date of this Prospectus, to purchase the
Units offered hereby from the Company in the amounts set forth below:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
UNDERWRITER                                                                    NUMBER OF UNITS
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------  ---------------
<S>                                                                            <C>
Paulson Investment Company, Inc. ............................................       1,370,000
marion bass securities corporation...........................................         500,000
Cohig & Associates, Inc. ....................................................         200,000
Capital West Securities, Inc. ...............................................          30,000
First Colonial Securities Group, Inc. .......................................          30,000
First London Securities Corporation..........................................          30,000
Kashner Davidson Securities Corporation......................................          30,000
Redwine & Company, Inc. .....................................................          30,000
Smith, Moore & Co. ..........................................................          30,000
                                                                               ---------------
      Total..................................................................       2,250,000
                                                                               ---------------
                                                                               ---------------
</TABLE>
 
    The Underwriting Agreement provides that  the Underwriters are obligated  to
purchase  all of the Units  offered hereby, other than  the Units subject to the
Overallotment Option, if any are purchased, subject to certain conditions.
 
    The Representatives have advised the  Company that the Underwriters  propose
to  offer the Units  to the public at  the Unit Offering Price  set forth on the
cover page of  this Prospectus  and to  selected dealers  at such  price less  a
concession   within  the  discretion   of  the  Representatives   and  that  the
Underwriters and  such  dealers  may  reallow a  concession  to  other  dealers,
including  the Underwriters, within the discretion of the Representatives. After
the initial  public  offering  of  the  Units,  the  Unit  Offering  Price,  the
concessions  to selected  dealers and  the reallowance  to other  dealers may be
changed by the Representatives.
 
    The Company  has  granted  the  Representatives  the  Overallotment  Option,
exercisable  during  the 45-day  period after  the date  of this  Prospectus, to
purchase up to a maximum of an additional 337,500 Units on the same terms as the
Units being purchased by the Underwriters from the Company. The  Representatives
may  exercise  the Overallotment  Option only  to  cover overallotments  made in
connection with this offering.
 
    The Company  has  agreed  to  sell and  issue  to  the  Representatives  the
Representatives'  Warrants. The Representatives' Warrants  are exercisable for a
period of four years beginning  one year from the  date of this Prospectus.  The
Representatives'  Warrants are exercisable to purchase  up to 178,075 Units at a
price of $9.60 per Unit (120% of the Unit Offering Price). The  Representatives'
Warrants  are not redeemable  by the Company.  The Representatives' Warrants are
nontransferable except to one  of the Underwriters or  to any individual who  is
either  a partner or  an officer of  an Underwriter, or  by will or  the laws of
descent and  distribution. The  holders of  the Representatives'  Warrants  will
have,  in that capacity,  no voting, dividend, or  other shareholder rights. Any
profit realized by the  Representatives on the sale  of the securities  issuable
upon  exercise of the  Representatives' Warrants may be  deemed to be additional
underwriting compensation.
 
    The securities underlying the Representatives' Warrants are being registered
on the Registration Statement  of which this Prospectus  is a part. The  Company
has  agreed to maintain an effective  registration statement at its expense with
respect to  the  issuance  of the  securities  underlying  the  Representatives'
Warrants  (and, if necessary, to allow  their public resale without restriction)
at all  times during  the  period in  which  the Representatives'  Warrants  are
exercisable.
 
    By virtue of holding the Representatives' Warrants, the Representatives have
the  opportunity to profit,  at a nominal  cost, from an  increase in the market
price  of  the   Company's  securities.   Furthermore,  the   exercise  of   the
Representatives'   Warrants  could  dilute  the  interests  of  the  holders  of
 
                                       44
<PAGE>
Common Stock and the existence of the Representatives' Warrants may make it more
difficult for  the Company  to  raise additional  equity capital.  Although  the
Company   will   obtain  additional   equity  capital   upon  exercise   of  the
Representatives' Warrants,  it  is likely  that  the Company  could  then  raise
additional  capital on more  favorable terms than  those of the Representatives'
Warrants.
 
    The Representatives also  will receive at  closing a nonaccountable  expense
allowance  equal to  two percent (2%)  of the aggregate  initial public offering
price of the Units sold in this offering, reduced by $35,000 previously paid  by
the Company as an advance against this allowance.
 
    A  person  associated with  one of  the Representatives  has entered  into a
consulting agreement with the Company pursuant  to which the Company has  issued
warrants  to such person for the purchase of 31,250 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $8.00 per share. Such warrants vest monthly through October 1,
1996 and are exercisable for a period of five years from the date of vesting.
 
    A person  associated  with  one  of the  underwriters  has  entered  into  a
consulting arrangement with the Company pursuant to which the Company has issued
warrants  to such person for the purchase of 15,625 shares of Common Stock at an
exercise price of $8.00 per share.
 
    The Representatives have informed  the Company that they  do not expect  the
Underwriters to confirm sales of Units offered by this Prospectus to any account
on a discretionary basis.
 
    The  Underwriting  Agreement  provides  for  reciprocal  indemnification and
contribution between the Company and its  controlling persons, on the one  hand,
and  the Underwriters  and their  respective controlling  persons, on  the other
hand, against certain liabilities in connection with the Registration  Statement
of  which this Prospectus is a  part, including liabilities under the Securities
Act.
 
    The Company's officers  and directors  and certain  other shareholders  have
agreed that for a period of one year after the date of this Prospectus they will
not offer, sell, contract to sell, grant any option for the sale of or otherwise
dispose  of any securities of the  Company (other than intra-family transfers or
transfers to trusts  for estate  planning purposes), without  the prior  written
consent of Paulson Investment Company, Inc.
 
    Prior  to this  offering, there  has been  no public  market for  the Units,
Common Stock  or  Warrants.  Accordingly,  the  Unit  Offering  Price  has  been
determined by negotiation between the Company and the Representatives. Among the
factors  considered  in  determining the  Unit  Offering Price,  in  addition to
prevailing market conditions, were the history and prospects of the industry  in
which the Company intends to compete, an assessment of the Company's management,
prospects  and capital structure, and such  other factors as the Representatives
and the Company deemed relevant.
 
                                 LEGAL MATTERS
 
    Certain legal matters related to this  offering will be passed upon for  the
Company  by Stoel Rives LLP, Seattle,  Washington. Certain legal matters related
to this  offering will  be passed  upon for  the Underwriters  by Tonkon,  Torp,
Galen,  Marmaduke & Booth, Portland,  Oregon. Stoel Rives LLP  may receive up to
6,000 Units in  partial consideration  of services  rendered to  the Company  in
connection with this offering.
 
                                    EXPERTS
 
    The financial statements of the Company as of December 31, 1994 and 1995 and
for  the  years then  ended  and for  the period  from  inception (May  1993) to
December 31, 1995 included in this Prospectus have been so included in  reliance
on the report (which contains an explanatory paragraph relating to the Company's
ability  to continue as a going  concern as described in Note  1 of Notes to the
Financial Statements) of Price Waterhouse LLP, independent accountants, given on
the authority of said firm as experts in auditing and accounting.
 
                                       45
<PAGE>
                             ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
 
    The Company  has filed  with  the Securities  and Exchange  Commission  (the
"Commission")  in Los Angeles, California a  Registration Statement on Form SB-2
under the Securities  Act with respect  to the securities  offered hereby.  This
Prospectus,  filed as part  of the Registration Statement,  does not contain all
the information set  forth in the  Registration Statement and  the exhibits  and
schedules  thereto, certain  portions of which  have been  omitted in accordance
with the rules and regulations of  the Commission. For further information  with
respect  to the Company and the securities  offered hereby, reference is made to
the Registration Statement and to the exhibits and schedules thereto, which  may
be  inspected at the Commission's offices without charge, or copies of which may
be obtained from the Commission upon payment of the prescribed fees.  Statements
made  in  this Prospectus  as to  the  contents of  any contract,  agreement, or
document referred  to  are  not  necessarily complete,  and  in  each  instance,
reference  is made to  the copy of such  contract or other  document filed as an
exhibit to the Registration Statement, and  each such statement is qualified  in
its  entirety by such reference. The Registration Statement and the exhibits and
schedules thereto may be inspected without charge at the Commission's  principal
office  at  Room  1024,  Judiciary  Plaza  Building,  450  Fifth  Street,  N.W.,
Washington, D. C. 20549 and the regional offices of the Commission located at 75
Park Place, 14th Floor, New  York, New York 10007  and 500 West Madison  Street,
14th  Floor, Chicago, Illinois 60661. Copies of such material may be obtained at
prescribed rates from  the public Reference  Section of the  Commission at  Room
1024, Judiciary Plaza Building, 450 Fifth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20549.
 
                                       46
<PAGE>
                         INDEX TO FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                                                PAGE
                                                                                                                -----
<S>                                                                                                          <C>
 
Report of Independent Accountants..........................................................................         F-2
 
Balance Sheet as of December 31, 1994 and 1995 and as of June 30, 1996 (unaudited).........................         F-3
 
Statement of Operations for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995, for the period from inception (May
  1993) through December 31, 1995, for the six month periods ended June 30, 1995 and 1996 (unaudited), and
  for the period from inception (May 1993) through June 30, 1996 (unaudited)...............................         F-4
 
Statement of Shareholders' Equity (Deficit) for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and for the six
  month period ended June 30, 1996 (unaudited).............................................................         F-5
 
Statement of Cash Flows for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995, for the period from inception (May
  1993) through December 31, 1995, for the six month periods ended June 30, 1995 and 1996 (unaudited), and
  for the period from inception (May 1993) through June 30, 1996 (unaudited)...............................         F-6
 
Notes to the Financial Statements..........................................................................         F-7
</TABLE>
 
                                      F-1
<PAGE>
                       REPORT OF INDEPENDENT ACCOUNTANTS
 
To the Board of Directors
and Shareholders of
Microvision, Inc.
 
    In  our opinion, the accompanying balance sheet and the related statement of
operations, of shareholders' equity (deficit) and of cash flows present  fairly,
in  all  material  respects,  the financial  position  of  Microvision,  Inc., a
development stage enterprise, at December 31, 1994 and 1995, and the results  of
its  operations and its cash  flows for the years then  ended and for the period
from inception (May  1993) to  December 31,  1995 in  conformity with  generally
accepted   accounting   principles.   These   financial   statements   are   the
responsibility of the Company's management; our responsibility is to express  an
opinion  on these  financial statements  based on  our audits.  We conducted our
audits of  these  statements  in accordance  with  generally  accepted  auditing
standards  which require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain reasonable
assurance  about  whether  the  financial   statements  are  free  of   material
misstatement.  An audit includes examining, on a test basis, evidence supporting
the  amounts  and  disclosures  in  the  financial  statements,  assessing   the
accounting  principles used  and significant  estimates made  by management, and
evaluating the overall  financial statement  presentation. We  believe that  our
audits provide a reasonable basis for the opinion expressed above.
 
    The  accompanying financial statements have  been prepared assuming that the
Company will  continue  as a  going  concern. As  discussed  in Note  1  to  the
financial  statements, the Company  is a development  stage enterprise which has
experienced significant losses from operations and has a net capital  deficiency
that  raise substantial doubt about its ability  to continue as a going concern.
Management's plans in regard to these matters are also described in Note 1.  The
financial  statements do not include any  adjustments that might result from the
outcome of this uncertainty.
 
PRICE WATERHOUSE LLP
 
Seattle, Washington
July 10, 1996, except as to the reverse stock
split described in Note 8, which is as
of August 9, 1996.
 
                                      F-2
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                                 BALANCE SHEET
                                     ASSETS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                        PRO FORMA
                                                 DECEMBER     DECEMBER                  JUNE 30,
                                                    31,          31,       JUNE 30,       1996
                                                   1994         1995         1996       (NOTE 8)
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                                          (UNAUDITED)  (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                             <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Current assets
  Cash and cash equivalents...................  $    67,700  $    98,500  $   462,400  $ 1,169,900
  Receivables from former employees...........       50,000       69,400        2,800        2,800
  Prepaid expenses............................           --           --       56,100       98,600
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
    Total current assets......................      117,700      167,900      521,300    1,271,300
Equipment, net................................       11,700        9,100       54,800       54,800
Other assets..................................        8,400        2,000       52,400       52,400
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
    Total assets..............................  $   137,800  $   179,000  $   628,500  $ 1,378,500
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
 
                          LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
 
Current liabilities
  Accounts payable............................  $   147,500  $   207,500  $   409,900  $   409,900
  Accrued compensation and related
   liabilities................................           --      336,400      362,600      362,600
  7% Convertible Subordinated Notes due 1997..           --           --           --      750,000
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
    Total current liabilities.................      147,500      543,900      772,500    1,522,500
Commitments and contingencies (Notes 5 and 6)
Shareholders' (deficit):
  Preferred stock, no par value, 31,250,000
   shares authorized, none, 499,478, 859,776
   (unaudited) and none (Pro forma) issued and
   outstanding................................           --    2,038,900    3,532,800           --
  Common stock, no par value, 31,250,000
   shares authorized, 3,033,203, 3,098,828,
   2,601,770 (unaudited) and 3,461,546 (Pro
   forma) shares issued and outstanding.......    4,488,800    4,745,900    4,793,700    8,326,500
  Deferred compensation.......................     (335,200)     (42,800)     (21,300)     (21,300)
  Subscription receivable.....................           --           --      (10,000)     (10,000)
  Deficit accumulated during development
   stage......................................   (4,163,300)  (7,106,900)  (8,439,200)  (8,439,200)
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
    Total shareholders' (deficit).............       (9,700)    (364,900)    (144,000)    (144,000)
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
    Total liabilities and shareholders' equity
     (deficit)................................  $   137,800  $   179,000  $   628,500  $ 1,378,500
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-3
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                            STATEMENT OF OPERATIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                         INCEPTION
                                                        (MAY 1993)                              INCEPTION
                              YEAR ENDED   YEAR ENDED       TO       SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS   (MAY 1993)
                               DECEMBER     DECEMBER     DECEMBER       ENDED        ENDED         TO
                                  31,          31,          31,       JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,     JUNE 30,
                                 1994         1995         1995         1995         1996         1996
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                                                                     (UNAUDITED)  (UNAUDITED)  (UNAUDITED)
<S>                           <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>          <C>
Contract revenue............  $   --       $    29,300  $    29,300  $   --       $    27,200  $    56,500
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
Research and development
 expense....................    1,804,400    1,931,200    4,882,400      700,000      692,100    5,574,500
Marketing, general and
 administrative expense.....    1,046,300    1,037,700    2,300,300      407,900      670,000    2,970,300
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
  Total expenses............    2,850,700    2,968,900    7,182,700    1,107,900    1,362,100    8,544,800
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
Loss from operations........   (2,850,700)  (2,939,600)  (7,153,400)  (1,107,900)  (1,334,900)  (8,488,300)
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
Interest income.............       39,000       31,800       82,300        9,000        5,000       87,300
Interest expense............      --            35,800       35,800      --             2,400       38,200
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
Net loss....................  $(2,811,700) $(2,943,600) $(7,106,900) $(1,098,900) $(1,332,300) $(8,439,200)
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
                              -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------  -----------
Pro forma net loss per share
 (unaudited)................               $     (0.63)              $     (0.24) $     (0.28)
                                           -----------               -----------  -----------
                                           -----------               -----------  -----------
Pro forma weighted average
 shares and share
 equivalents outstanding
 (unaudited)................                 4,677,077                 4,587,471    4,766,683
                                           -----------               -----------  -----------
                                           -----------               -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-4
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                  STATEMENT OF SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                              PREFERRED STOCK             COMMON STOCK
                                         --------------------------  -----------------------    DEFERRED     SUBSCRIPTION
                                            SHARES        AMOUNT       SHARES      AMOUNT     COMPENSATION    RECEIVABLE
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
<S>                                      <C>            <C>          <C>         <C>          <C>            <C>
Issuance of founders' shares, net......           --             --   1,893,750  $   212,100            --            --
Issuance of stock in exchange for
 Exclusive License Agreement (at
 $3.52/share)..........................           --             --     187,500      660,000            --            --
Issuance of stock for cash (at
 $3.52/share), net of costs............           --             --     937,500    3,077,400            --            --
Net loss for period ended December 31,
 1993..................................           --             --          --           --            --            --
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
Balance at December 31, 1993...........           --             --   3,018,750    3,949,500            --            --
Issuance of stock for cash (at
 $6.40/share)..........................           --             --      14,453       92,500            --            --
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock..........................           --             --          --      446,800   $  (335,200)           --
Net loss for year ended December 31,
 1994..................................           --             --          --           --            --            --
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
Balance at December 31, 1994...........           --             --   3,033,203    4,488,800      (335,200)           --
Issuance of stock upon exercise of
 warrants..............................           --             --      62,500        6,000            --            --
Issuance of stock to Board members for
 services..............................           --             --       3,125       11,000            --            --
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock..........................           --             --          --      325,100            --            --
Issuance of preferred stock for cash,
 net of costs (at $4.80/share).........      499,478    $ 2,038,900          --           --            --            --
Amortization of deferred compensation,
 net...................................           --             --          --           --       220,150            --
Cancellation of stock options..........           --             --          --      (85,000)       72,250            --
Net loss for year ended December 31,
 1995..................................           --             --          --           --            --            --
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
Balance at December 31, 1995...........      499,478      2,038,900   3,098,828    4,745,900       (42,800)           --
Issuance of stock to Board members for
 services (unaudited)..................           --             --       6,250       30,000            --            --
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock (unaudited)..............           --             --          --       23,400            --            --
Issuance of preferred stock for cash,
 net of costs (at $4.80/share)
 (unaudited)...........................      360,298      1,493,900          --           --            --            --
Issuance of common stock for services
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --       4,375       21,000            --            --
Issuance of common stock to
 shareholders who had originally
 purchased common stock at $6.40/share
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --       4,817           --            --            --
Exercise of warrants for common stock
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --      50,000       40,000            --    $  (10,000)
Cashless exercise of warrants for
 common stock (unaudited)..............           --             --     296,875           --            --            --
Cancellation of founder's common stock
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --    (859,375)     (66,600)           --            --
Amortization of deferred compensation
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --          --           --        21,500            --
Net loss for the six months ended June
 30, 1996 (unaudited)..................           --             --          --           --            --            --
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
Balance at June 30, 1996 (unaudited)...      859,776    $ 3,532,800   2,601,770  $ 4,793,700   $   (21,300)   $  (10,000)
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
                                         -------------  -----------  ----------  -----------  -------------  ------------
 
<CAPTION>
                                           DEFICIT
                                         ACCUMULATED
                                            DURING     SHAREHOLDERS'
                                         DEVELOPMENT      EQUITY
                                            STAGE        (DEFICIT)
                                         ------------  -------------
<S>                                      <C>           <C>
Issuance of founders' shares, net......           --    $   212,100
Issuance of stock in exchange for
 Exclusive License Agreement (at
 $3.52/share)..........................           --        660,000
Issuance of stock for cash (at
 $3.52/share), net of costs............           --      3,077,400
Net loss for period ended December 31,
 1993..................................   $(1,351,600)   (1,351,600)
                                         ------------  -------------
Balance at December 31, 1993...........   (1,351,600)     2,597,900
Issuance of stock for cash (at
 $6.40/share)..........................           --         92,500
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock..........................           --        111,600
Net loss for year ended December 31,
 1994..................................   (2,811,700)    (2,811,700)
                                         ------------  -------------
Balance at December 31, 1994...........   (4,163,300)        (9,700)
Issuance of stock upon exercise of
 warrants..............................           --          6,000
Issuance of stock to Board members for
 services..............................           --         11,000
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock..........................           --        325,100
Issuance of preferred stock for cash,
 net of costs (at $4.80/share).........           --      2,038,900
Amortization of deferred compensation,
 net...................................           --        220,150
Cancellation of stock options..........           --        (12,750)
Net loss for year ended December 31,
 1995..................................   (2,943,600)    (2,943,600)
                                         ------------  -------------
Balance at December 31, 1995...........   (7,106,900)      (364,900)
Issuance of stock to Board members for
 services (unaudited)..................           --         30,000
Issuance of warrants and options for
 common stock (unaudited)..............           --         23,400
Issuance of preferred stock for cash,
 net of costs (at $4.80/share)
 (unaudited)...........................           --      1,493,900
Issuance of common stock for services
 (unaudited)...........................           --         21,000
Issuance of common stock to
 shareholders who had originally
 purchased common stock at $6.40/share
 (unaudited)...........................           --             --
Exercise of warrants for common stock
 (unaudited)...........................           --         30,000
Cashless exercise of warrants for
 common stock (unaudited)..............           --             --
Cancellation of founder's common stock
 (unaudited)...........................           --        (66,600)
Amortization of deferred compensation
 (unaudited)...........................           --         21,500
Net loss for the six months ended June
 30, 1996 (unaudited)..................   (1,332,300)    (1,332,300)
                                         ------------  -------------
Balance at June 30, 1996 (unaudited)...   $(8,439,200)  $  (144,000)
                                         ------------  -------------
                                         ------------  -------------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-5
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                            STATEMENT OF CASH FLOWS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                       INCEPTION
                                          YEAR ENDED    YEAR ENDED   (MAY 1993) TO
                                         DECEMBER 31,  DECEMBER 31,  DECEMBER 31,
                                             1994          1995          1995
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  SIX MONTHS   SIX MONTHS     INCEPTION
                                                                                    ENDED JUNE   ENDED JUNE   (MAY 1993) TO
                                                                                     30, 1995     30, 1996    JUNE 30, 1996
                                                                                    -----------  -----------  -------------
                                                                                    (UNAUDITED)  (UNAUDITED)   (UNAUDITED)
<S>                                      <C>           <C>           <C>            <C>          <C>          <C>
Cash flows from operating activities:
  Net loss.............................   $(2,811,700)  $(2,943,600)  $(7,106,900)  $(1,098,900) $(1,332,300)  $(8,439,200)
  Adjustments to reconcile net loss to
   net cash used in operations:
    Amortization of deferred
     compensation......................           --       207,400        207,400         1,500       21,500       228,900
    Depreciation and write-off of
     equipment.........................       33,100         2,600         35,700            --        5,200        40,900
    Non-cash expenses related to
     issuance of stock, warrants and
     options...........................      111,600       336,100      1,107,700       145,600       74,400     1,182,100
  Change in:
    Receivables from former employees..     (109,600)       47,200        (69,400)       47,200                    (69,400)
    Allowance for doubtful accounts....       66,600       (66,600)            --       (66,600)          --            --
    Prepaid expenses...................           --            --             --            --      (56,100)      (56,100)
    Other assets.......................       (2,300)        6,400         (2,000)        8,100      (50,400)      (52,400)
    Accounts payable...................      (39,500)       60,000        207,500        18,500      185,600       393,100
    Accrued compensation and related
     liabilities.......................           --       336,400        336,400        13,200       26,200       362,600
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
      Net cash used in operating
       activities......................   (2,751,800)   (2,014,100)    (5,283,600)     (931,400)  (1,125,900)   (6,409,500)
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Cash flows from investing activities:
  Purchases of equipment...............      (30,200)           --        (44,800)       (4,100)     (34,100)      (78,900)
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
      Net cash used in investing
       activities......................      (30,200)           --        (44,800)       (4,100)     (34,100)      (78,900)
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Cash flows from financing activities:
  Net proceeds from issuance of common
   stock...............................       92,500         6,000      3,388,000            --       30,000     3,418,000
  Net proceeds from issuance of
   preferred stock.....................           --     2,038,900      2,038,900       899,200    1,493,900     3,532,800
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
      Net cash provided by financing
       activities......................       92,500     2,044,900      5,426,900       899,200    1,523,900     6,950,800
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Net increase (decrease) in cash and
  cash equivalents.....................   (2,689,500)       30,800         98,500       (36,300)     363,900       462,400
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning
  of period............................    2,757,200        67,700             --        67,700       98,500            --
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Cash and cash equivalents at end of
  period...............................   $   67,700    $   98,500    $    98,500   $    31,400  $   462,400   $   462,400
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Cash paid for interest.................   $       --    $   35,800    $    35,800   $        --  $     2,400   $    38,200
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
                                         ------------  ------------  -------------  -----------  -----------  -------------
Supplemental disclosure of non-cash
  transactions:
  Cancellation of Founders' shares in
   exchange for forgiveness of note....                                                          $    66,600   $    66,600
                                                                                                 -----------  -------------
                                                                                                 -----------  -------------
  Capital lease of equipment...........                                                          $    16,800   $    16,800
                                                                                                 -----------  -------------
                                                                                                 -----------  -------------
</TABLE>
 
   The accompanying notes are an integral part of these financial statements.
 
                                      F-6
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                       NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
1.  THE COMPANY
    Microvision,  Inc. (the Company), a Washington corporation, was incorporated
May 31, 1993.  The Company was  established to develop,  manufacture and  market
Virtual  Retinal Display (VRD)  technology, which projects  images directly onto
the eye's  retina.  The  Company  is working  closely  with  the  University  of
Washington's  Human Interface  Technology Lab to  develop the  VRD for potential
defense, healthcare, business, industrial and consumer applications.
 
    The Company is a development stage enterprise which has incurred significant
net losses  since  inception.  The  ability  of  the  Company  to  continue  its
operations  is dependent upon its ability to obtain financing, which to date has
been principally  from  the  sale  of  stock. The  Company  intends  to  file  a
Registration  Statement for an initial public  offering (IPO) of units including
common stock and  warrants from  which it expects  to generate  net proceeds  of
approximately  $15,743,000. Management  believes proceeds from  the IPO together
with  proceeds  from  future  corporate  partnerships,  offerings  and/or  other
financing  sources will enable the Company  to continue research and development
activities and develop products pursuant to its long-term growth plan.
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES
 
    CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS
 
    Cash  equivalents  consist  of  highly  liquid  investments  with   original
maturities  of 90  days or  less. The Company  had no  short-term investments at
December 31, 1994 or 1995.
 
    EQUIPMENT
 
    Equipment is stated at cost and depreciated over the estimated useful  lives
of the assets (five years) using the straight-line method.
 
    CONTRACT REVENUE
 
    Contract  revenue  has been  recorded on  the  completed contract  method of
revenue recognition.
 
    INCOME TAXES
 
    The Company provides for income taxes  under the principles of Statement  of
Financial  Accounting Standards No. 109 (SFAS 109) which requires that provision
be made for  taxes currently  due and  for the  expected future  tax effects  of
temporary differences between book and tax bases of assets and liabilities.
 
    PRO FORMA NET LOSS PER SHARE (UNAUDITED)
 
    Pro  forma  net loss  per share  is computed  on the  basis of  the weighted
average number of  shares of common  stock outstanding during  the period  after
giving retroactive adjustment for the conversion of all Series A preferred stock
into an equal number of shares of common stock, which will occur upon completion
of  the IPO, and  after consideration of  the dilutive effect,  if any, of stock
options and  warrants.  Pursuant  to  the requirements  of  the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission, common equivalent  shares relating to  preferred stock and
convertible debt (using the  if-converted method) and  stock options (using  the
treasury  stock method and an initial public  offering price of $8.00 per share)
issued subsequent to June  30, 1995 have been  included in the computations  for
all  periods presented. Historical  net loss per share  is not presented because
such amounts are not deemed meaningful  due to the changes in capital  structure
that will occur in connection with the IPO.
 
    RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT
 
    Research  and  development costs,  net  of reimbursements,  are  expensed as
incurred. Research  and  development  costs  will  be  expensed  until  the  net
realizable value of a related product or technology is assured.
 
                                      F-7
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
2.  SUMMARY OF SIGNIFICANT ACCOUNTING POLICIES (CONTINUED)
    FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS
 
    The  Company's  financial instruments  consist  primarily of  cash  and cash
equivalents, receivables  from former  employees, accounts  payable and  accrued
compensation  and related liabilities. These financial instruments are stated at
their respective carrying values in the December 31, 1995 financial  statements,
which approximates their fair values. The Company places its cash in high credit
quality financial institutions.
 
    USE OF ESTIMATES
 
    The  preparation  of  financial  statements  in  conformity  with  generally
accepted  accounting  principles  requires  management  to  make  estimates  and
assumptions  that  affect the  reported amounts  of  assets and  liabilities and
disclosure of contingent  assets and liabilities  at the date  of the  financial
statements  and  the  reported  amounts  of  revenues  and  expenses  during the
reporting period. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
 
    RECENT ACCOUNTING PRONOUNCEMENTS
 
    In December 1995, the Financial Accounting Standards Board issued  Statement
of   Financial  Accounting   Standards  No.  123   "Accounting  for  Stock-Based
Compensation" (FAS 123).  This pronouncement  requires the Company  to elect  to
account for stock-based compensation on a fair value based model or an intrinsic
value  based model.  The intrinsic  value based model  is currently  used by the
Company and  is the  accounting principle  prescribed by  Accounting  Principles
Board  Opinion No. 25 "Accounting for Stock Issued to Employees" (APB 25). Under
this model, compensation cost is the excess, if any, of the quoted market  price
of  the stock at the date of grant  or other measurement date over the amount an
employee must pay to acquire the stock. The fair value based model prescribed by
FAS 123 would  require the Company  to value stock-based  compensation using  an
accepted  valuation model. Compensation cost is measured at the grant date based
on the value of  the award and  is recognized over the  service period which  is
usually  the  vesting  period. The  Company  plans  to continue  to  account for
stock-based  compensation  using  APB  25  and  is  required  to  implement  the
disclosure  requirements of  FAS 123 during  the year ending  December 31, 1996.
Implementation will not have a significant impact on the financial statements.
 
    UNAUDITED INTERIM FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
 
    The information presented as of June 30,  1996 and for the six months  ended
June  30, 1995 and 1996 has not been  audited. In the opinion of management, the
unaudited interim financial statements include all adjustments (consisting  only
of  normal  recurring adjustments)  necessary  to present  fairly  the Company's
financial position as of  June 30, 1996  and the results  of its operations  and
cash  flows for the six months ended June 30, 1995 and 1996. The interim results
of operations are not necessarily indicative of results which may occur for  the
full fiscal year.
 
                                      F-8
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
3.  COMPOSITION OF CERTAIN FINANCIAL STATEMENT CAPTIONS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                      DECEMBER 31,
                                                                                ------------------------
                                                                                   1994         1995
                                                                                -----------  -----------
<S>                                                                             <C>          <C>
Receivables from former employees
  Receivables.................................................................  $    50,000  $     2,800
  Notes.......................................................................       66,600       66,600
                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                    116,600       69,400
  Allowance for doubtful accounts.............................................      (66,600)          --
                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                $    50,000  $    69,400
                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                -----------  -----------
Equipment, net
  Equipment...................................................................  $    12,800  $    12,800
  Accumulated depreciation....................................................       (1,100)      (3,700)
                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                $    11,700  $     9,100
                                                                                -----------  -----------
                                                                                -----------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
4.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT)
 
    COMMON STOCK
 
    In  July 1993,  the Company  issued 1,893,750  initial shares  of its common
stock to the founders  for $212,100, net of  issuance costs. Subscribers to  the
initial offering received warrants to purchase an additional 1,893,750 shares of
common  stock at an exercise price of $.80 per share and warrants to purchase an
additional 946,875 common shares  at an exercise price  of $2.40 per share.  The
warrants  are  exercisable through  July 24,  2003.  Warrants for  1,893,750 and
625,000 shares were canceled during 1994 and 1995, respectively.
 
    In September 1993, the Company completed a private placement of common stock
in which 375,000  shares of  common stock  were issued  for $3.52  per share.  A
warrant  for the purchase of an additional  share for $4.80 was issued with each
share of common stock. All of the warrants expired, unexercised, in April 1995.
 
    In October 1993, the Company issued 187,500 shares of common stock valued at
$660,000 to acquire a technology license as described in Note 5.
 
    In November 1993, the Company  completed an additional private placement  of
common  stock in which 562,500 shares of  common stock were issued for $3.52 per
share.
 
    In October 1994, the Company completed its third private placement of common
stock in which 14,453 shares of common stock were issued for $6.40 per share.
 
    PREFERRED STOCK
 
    In November 1994, the Company authorized the issuance of 1,875,000 Series  A
Preferred  Stock per share  which has liquidation  and dividend preferences over
common stock. Dividends accrue when and  if declared by the Board of  Directors.
The  Series A Preferred Stock  is convertible into an  equal number of shares of
common stock.  As  of  December  31,  1995,  499,478  shares  had  been  issued,
generating gross proceeds of $2,397,500.
 
    WARRANTS
 
    On  December 1, 1993, warrants to purchase 125,000 shares of common stock of
the Company at an exercise price of  $3.52 per share were issued to persons  who
performed  services  relating to  raising  equity capital.  These  warrants were
exercised subsequent to December 31, 1995.
 
                                      F-9
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
4.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT) (CONTINUED)
    During 1993, warrants to purchase a total of 468,750 shares of common  stock
were issued in two separate issuances to an investment banker who raised capital
for  the Company. The first issuance was  of warrants to purchase 156,250 common
shares at an exercise price of $4.00  per share and the second was for  warrants
to  purchase 312,500  common shares  at an  exercise price  of $4.80  per share.
During 1995, the Company extended the exercise period and reduced the number  of
shares  associated  with  the warrants  issued  such that  warrants  to purchase
359,375 shares of common stock at an exercise price of $4.80 per share  remained
outstanding.  Subsequent to December 31, 1995,  the exercise period was extended
and the  number  of common  shares  associated  with these  warrants  was  again
reduced, such that warrants to purchase 125,000 shares at $6.40 per share remain
outstanding and expire in June 2001.
 
    During  1994, two  separate issuances of  warrants were made  to persons who
performed capital  raising services.  The  first issuance  was for  warrants  to
purchase  62,500 shares of common  stock of the Company  at an exercise price of
$.10 per share. The second issuance  was for warrants to purchase 62,500  shares
of  common stock of the Company at an  exercise price of $3.20 per share with an
expiration date of  March 31, 1999.  Warrants granted under  the first  issuance
were  exercised during 1995 for proceeds  of $6,000. The remaining warrants were
exercised subsequent to December 31, 1995.
 
    In September 1995, the Company granted warrants to purchase 31,250 shares of
common stock  at an  exercise  price of  $4.80 per  share  to a  consultant  who
performed capital raising services. The warrants were granted at their estimated
fair value as determined by the Company. The warrants vest ratably over one year
and  expire five years following  the date of issue.  Subsequent to December 31,
1995, the exercise price of the warrants was increased to $6.40 per share.
 
    In December 1995, the Company issued  warrants to purchase 31,250 shares  of
common stock at an exercise price of $4.80 per share to two consultants involved
in  research and capital raising activities.  The warrants were granted at their
estimated fair value  as determined by  the Company. The  warrants vest  ratably
over  one year and expire five years  following the date of issue. Subsequent to
December 31, 1995, the exercise price of the warrants was increased to $6.40 per
share.
 
    In December 1995, the Company granted a warrant to purchase 1,563 shares  of
common  stock at  an exercise price  of $4.80 per  share for rent  expense to be
incurred in January 1996. These warrants vested in January 1996 and expire  five
years from the date of issue.
 
    OPTIONS
 
    During  1993, the Company adopted the  1993 Stock Option Plan which provided
for  granting  incentive  stock  options  (ISOs)  and  nonqualified  options  to
employees,  directors,  officers, and  certain  nonemployees of  the  Company as
determined by  the  Board  of  Directors,  or  its  designated  committee  (Plan
Administrator),  for the  purchase of  up to  a total  of 228,938  shares of the
Company's authorized but unissued common stock. The date of grant, option price,
vesting period and other terms specific to options granted under such plan  were
determined by the Plan Administrator.
 
    During   1994,  the  Company   adopted  the  1994   Combined  Incentive  and
Nonqualified Stock  Option Plan  which provided  for the  granting of  incentive
stock options to employees, directors, officers, and certain nonemployees of the
Company  as  determined by  the Plan  Administrator for  the purchase  of common
shares not to exceed a total of 435,000 of the Company's authorized but unissued
shares of common  stock, subject to  adjustment by the  Plan Administrator.  The
date  of grant, option price, vesting terms  and other terms specific to options
granted under such plan were determined by the Plan Administrator.
 
                                      F-10
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
4.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT) (CONTINUED)
    In 1994, a consultant of the Company was granted warrants to purchase 31,250
shares of common  stock at an  exercise price  of $.80 per  share. Research  and
development  expense of  $85,000 related  to the fair  value of  the warrant, as
determined by the Company, was recorded during the year ended December 31, 1994.
During 1995, this consultant became the Executive Vice President of the  Company
and  these warrants were canceled and  replaced with options to purchase 296,875
shares of common stock. The options were recorded at $237,500, the fair value as
determined by the  Company, and  compensation expense of  $225,000 was  recorded
during  the year ended  December 31, 1995.  Options for 97,656  shares of common
stock at an exercise price  of $.80-$3.20 per share  were vested as of  December
31,  1995. The remainder vest in  quarterly increments beginning January 1, 1996
at exercise prices  of $3.20-$7.20 per  share. These options  expire five  years
from their vesting date.
 
    In  1994, the Company  granted options to purchase  241,845 shares of common
stock to the Chief Executive Officer of the Company in three separate issuances.
During 1995, the officer's employment agreement was renegotiated and the  number
of  options were increased. Under the  employment agreement, the Company granted
options to purchase a total of 311,517 shares of common stock to the officer  in
three  separate  issuances. The  first  issuance comprised  options  for 115,813
shares of common stock at  an exercise price of  $.80. These options were  fully
vested  at  December 31,  1995.  The second  and  third issuance  each comprised
options to purchase 97,852 shares of common stock at a price of $3.20 and $6.40,
respectively, and vest over one year in quarterly increments beginning March 31,
1996 and March 31,  1997, respectively. The options  expire five years from  the
grant. The options were valued at $346,000 based upon the difference between the
exercise  price and fair  value of the  underlying shares, as  determined by the
Company, and compensation expense of $331,000 was recorded during the year ended
December 31, 1995.
 
    In 1994, the Company  granted to consultants  acting in advisory  capacities
options  to purchase  a total of  12,500 shares  of common stock  at an exercise
price of $6.40 per  share. Compensation expense associated  with this grant  was
not  material. Such options have  vested and expire five  years from the date of
issue.
 
    In November 1995, the  Company issued options to  purchase 25,000 shares  of
common  stock  at exercise  prices  ranging from  $4.80  to $7.20  per  share to
employees under the employees' compensation agreements. The options were granted
at no less than their estimated fair  value as determined by the Company.  These
options  vest quarterly beginning in 1996 and expire five years from the date of
issue.
 
    Subsequent to December 31,  1995, the Company's  Board of Directors  adopted
the  1996 Stock Option Plan (the "1996  Plan") and the 1996 Independent Director
Stock Plan (the "Director Plan"). The  1996 Plan provides for granting ISOs  and
non qualified options (NSOs) to employees, officers and agents of the Company as
determined  by the Plan Administrator, for the  purchase of up to 750,000 shares
of the Company's authorized but unissued common stock. The terms and  conditions
of  any options granted, including the exercise  price and vesting period are to
be determined by the Plan Administrator. The Director Plan provides for granting
up to a total of 75,000 shares  of common stock to nonemployee directors of  the
Company  as determined  by the  Board of Directors  or a  committee thereof. The
Company expects to terminate the prior plans effective immediately following the
issuance of  the  shares of  common  stock  subject to  the  outstanding  grants
thereunder.
 
                                      F-11
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
4.  SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY (DEFICIT) (CONTINUED)
    The  following  summarizes activity  with  respect to  options  and warrants
through December 31, 1995:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                             WARRANTS                  OPTIONS
                                                    --------------------------  ----------------------
                                                                    EXERCISE                EXERCISE
                                                       SHARES        PRICE       SHARES       PRICE
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
<S>                                                 <C>           <C>           <C>        <C>
Granted...........................................     3,809,375  $   .80-4.80         --           --
                                                    ------------  ------------
Outstanding at December 31, 1993..................     3,809,375      .80-4.80         --           --
Granted...........................................       187,500      .10-3.52    254,345  $  .80-6.40
Canceled/expired..................................    (1,893,750)     .80-2.40         --           --
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
Outstanding at December 31, 1994..................     2,103,125      .10-4.80    254,345     .80-6.40
Granted...........................................        64,063     4.80-6.40    391,547     .80-7.20
Exercised.........................................       (62,500)          .10         --           --
Canceled/expired..................................    (1,171,875)     .80-4.80         --           --
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
Outstanding at December 31, 1995..................       932,813  $   .80-6.40    645,892  $  .80-7.20
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
Exercisable at December 31, 1995..................       894,271  $   .80-6.40    213,471  $  .80-3.20
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
                                                    ------------  ------------  ---------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
5.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES
    In October 1993, the Company concurrently entered into a Research  Agreement
and  Exclusive  License Agreement  (License  Agreement) with  the  University of
Washington (UW).  The  Research  Agreement  provides  for  the  Company  to  pay
$5,133,500  to fund  agreed-upon VRD research  and development  activities to be
carried out  by UW.  The research  funding is  required to  be paid  in  sixteen
quarterly  instalments  of $320,800  and  is payable  at  the beginning  of each
quarter. Should  the Company  determine that  for  any reason  it would  not  be
beneficial to continue funding the Research Agreement, the terms of the Research
Agreement  permit the Company to terminate  the agreement and discontinue future
payments. Total payments made for the years ended December 31, 1994 and 1995 and
the period from inception  to December 31, 1995  are $1,283,400, $1,283,400  and
$2,887,600, respectively.
 
    In  an effort  to match  more closely  the timing  of the  Company's funding
obligations under the Research Agreement with the actual research work performed
by the  HIT  Lab, the  Company  and  UW are  currently  discussing  rescheduling
payments  and extending the  term of the  Research Agreement. Future commitments
under the Agreement in effect at December 31, 1995 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
YEAR ENDING DECEMBER 31,
- -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
<S>                                                                                        <C>
1996.....................................................................................  $   1,283,400
1997.....................................................................................        962,500
                                                                                           -------------
                                                                                           $   2,245,900
                                                                                           -------------
                                                                                           -------------
</TABLE>
 
    The License Agreement grants the Company the rights to certain  intellectual
property  including the technology being  developed under the Research Agreement
whereby the Company has an exclusive,  royalty-bearing license to make, use  and
sell  or sublicense the  licensed technology. In  consideration for the license,
the Company  agreed  to  pay  a one-time  nonrefundable  license  issue  fee  of
$5,133,500.  Payments under the  Research Agreement are  credited to the license
fee. In the event the Research Agreement is terminated and the Company elects to
continue the License Agreement, the
 
                                      F-12
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
5.  COMMITMENTS AND CONTINGENCIES (CONTINUED)
remaining license fee becomes due and payable. If Microvision were to  terminate
the  License Agreement, it believes that  further payments would not be required
and, accordingly,  has not  booked the  balance of  payments due  as an  accrued
expense.
 
    Under  the Research Agreement, the Company  is required to pay certain costs
related to filing  and processing of  any patents and  copyrights it chooses  to
support or fund in accordance with the agreement.
 
    During  1993, the Company issued 187,500 shares  of common stock with a fair
value of $660,000, as estimated by the Company, to UW and certain affiliates  as
additional  consideration under the License Agreement. Additionally, the Company
will pay certain ongoing royalties.
 
    In March 1994, the Company entered into an Exclusive License Agreement (HALO
Agreement) with UW. The HALO Agreement  grants the Company the right to  receive
certain  technical  information  relating  to  HALO  Display  technology  and an
exclusive  right  to  market  the  technical  information  for  the  purpose  of
commercial  exploitation to unaffiliated entities.  Under the HALO Agreement the
Company paid $25,000  in 1994 to  fund research relating  to the development  of
certain  technical information relating to  HALO Display technology. In addition
to the initial payment, the Company has committed to pay to UW the following:
 
<TABLE>
<S>                                        <C>
Upon filing for first patent.............  $75,000 and 31,250 common shares
Upon issuance of the first patent........  $100,000 and 62,500 common shares
</TABLE>
 
    In September 1995, the  Company reserved 31,250 shares  of common stock  for
issuance upon exercise of options to be granted to members of the research staff
at  UW. During July 1996,  these options were granted  with an exercise price of
$6.40 per share.
 
    During the period  March 1994  through June  1995, warrants  to purchase  an
aggregate  of 343,750  shares of  common stock at  prices ranging  from $0.80 to
$6.40 per share were approved by  the Company's Board of Directors for  issuance
to  a director. The director resigned his position in August 1995. Subsequent to
December 31,  1995, the  Board of  Directors  concluded that  the grant  of  the
warrants  to the former director had  neither been properly authorized under the
Washington Business Corporation Act nor supported by adequate consideration. The
former director disputes the Company's view of the circumstances surrounding the
approval of the Warrants, has engaged counsel with respect to the matter and has
informed the Company that if settlement of the parties' differences with respect
to the warrants  is not  reached, he intends  to commence  legal action  seeking
damages  for breach of contract and a  declaration that the warrants are in full
force and effect. Although the Company believes its position with respect to the
warrants is  correct, if  the  former director  were  to commence  legal  action
against  the Company, there is no assurance that he would not prevail on some or
all of such claims.
 
6.  LEASE COMMITMENTS
    During late 1995  and early 1996,  the Company entered  into leases for  its
current  office  space and  certain  equipment under  noncancelable  capital and
operating leases with initial  or remaining terms in  excess of one year.  Under
the operating lease for office space, the Company may elect to occupy additional
space  at  greater cost  and  has the  option  to make  payment  in the  form of
preferred shares in lieu of paying cash through July 1996.
 
                                      F-13
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
6.  LEASE COMMITMENTS (CONTINUED)
    The Company has exercised this option and issued 7,693 preferred shares  and
warrants  to purchase 1,563 shares of common stock to the landlord. Rent expense
of approximately $36,900 will  be recorded for the  share issuance and  warrants
granted  in December 1995.  Future minimum rental  commitments under capital and
operating leases for years ending December 31 are as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                                  CAPITAL    OPERATING
                                                                                  LEASES      LEASES
                                                                                 ---------  -----------
<S>                                                                              <C>        <C>
1996...........................................................................  $   5,600  $    49,300
1997...........................................................................      5,600       59,600
1998...........................................................................      5,600       59,600
                                                                                 ---------  -----------
                                                                                 $  16,800  $   168,500
                                                                                 ---------  -----------
                                                                                 ---------  -----------
</TABLE>
 
7.  INCOME TAXES
    A current provision  for income taxes  has not been  recorded for the  years
ended  December 31, 1994 or 1995 or the  period inception to date due to taxable
losses incurred during such periods. A valuation allowance has been recorded for
deferred tax assets  because realization  is primarily  dependent on  generating
sufficient   taxable  income   prior  to   expiration  of   net  operating  loss
carry-forwards.
 
    At December 31, 1995, the Company  had net operating loss carry-forwards  of
approximately  $2,812,000  for federal  income tax  reporting purposes.  The net
operating losses will expire  beginning in 2005 if  not previously utilized.  In
certain  circumstances, as specified in the Internal Revenue Code, a 50% or more
ownership change by  certain combinations of  the Company's stockholders  during
any  three-year period would  result in limitations on  the Company's ability to
utilize its net operating loss  carry-forwards. The Company has determined  that
such  a  change  occurred  during  1995  and  the  annual  utilization  of  loss
carry-forwards will be limited to approximately $761,000.
 
    Deferred tax assets are summarized as follows:
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                                           DECEMBER 31,    DECEMBER 31,
                                                                               1994            1995
                                                                          --------------  --------------
<S>                                                                       <C>             <C>
Net operating loss carry-forward........................................  $      556,000  $      956,000
Capitalized research and development....................................         830,000       1,143,000
Other...................................................................         (30,000)        247,000
                                                                          --------------  --------------
                                                                               1,356,000       2,346,000
Valuation allowance.....................................................      (1,356,000)     (2,346,000)
                                                                          --------------  --------------
Deferred taxes..........................................................  $           --  $           --
                                                                          --------------  --------------
                                                                          --------------  --------------
</TABLE>
 
8.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS
    The Company intends to file a  Registration Statement for an initial  public
offering  (IPO) of 2,250,000 units, each consisting of one share of common stock
and one warrant to purchase  one share of common  stock. In anticipation of  the
IPO,  on July 10, 1996, subject to  shareholder approval, the Company's Board of
Directors approved a 1-for-3.2 reverse stock  split of the Company's common  and
preferred  stock. The  reverse stock split  was approved by  the shareholders on
August 9,  1996. All  information in  these financial  statements pertaining  to
shares  of  capital stock  and  per share  amounts  have been  adjusted  to give
retroactive effect to the reverse split.  It is anticipated a nominal number  of
fractional  shares  will  be  redeemed  in  connection  with  this  action. Upon
completion of the IPO,  the preferred stock  will convert to  common stock on  a
one-for-one  basis. This conversion is reflected  in the pro forma balance sheet
as of June 30, 1996.
 
                                      F-14
<PAGE>
                               MICROVISION, INC.
                        (A DEVELOPMENT STAGE ENTERPRISE)
                 NOTES TO THE FINANCIAL STATEMENTS (CONTINUED)
 
8.  SUBSEQUENT EVENTS (CONTINUED)
    On July 10, 1996,  the Company issued 7%  Convertible Subordinated Notes  in
the  amount of  $750,000. The Notes  bear interest  at 7% payable  in arrears on
December 15 and June 15 and are due July 10, 1997. The Notes are convertible  at
any  time following 90 days after the effective date of a public offering of the
Company's common stock generating  proceeds of at least  $5 million into  18,000
shares  of common  stock for  each $100,000  in outstanding  principal amount of
Notes. Additionally, at any time following  90 days after the effective date  of
such  a public offering  and prior to March  15, 1997 the  holder may redeem the
unpaid principal amount of Notes plus accrued interest and receive 6,000  shares
of  common stock of  the Company for  each $100,000 in  principal redeemed. Debt
issuance costs amounted to $42,500. The effect of the transaction is included in
the pro forma balance sheet as of June 30, 1996.
 
    During the period from January 1, 1996 to August 9, 1996 the Company  issued
options and warrants to purchase approximately 350,000 shares of common stock at
exercise prices ranging from $0.80 to $8.80 per share.
 
                                      F-15
<PAGE>
                 (This page has been left blank intentionally.)
<PAGE>
                                                         Hand-Held
                                                         Communications
                                                         Devices
 
                                                         MANUFACTURERS OF
                                                         PORTABLE COMMUNICATIONS
                                                         DEVICES HAVE IDENTIFIED
                                                         A NEED FOR PRODUCTS
                                                         THAT INCORPORATE
                                                         PERSONAL DISPLAY UNITS
                                                         FOR VIEWING FAX,
                                                         ELECTRONIC MAIL AND
                                                         GRAPHIC IMAGES ON
                                                         HIGHLY MINIATURIZED
                                                         DEVICES.
 
MICROVISION EXPECTS THAT THE RANGE OF PRODUCTS IN THE HAND-HELD COMMUNICATIONS
DEVICES CATEGORY MAY INCLUDE CELLULAR PHONES AND PAGERS THAT PROJECT INTO VIEW
DATA OR OTHER INFORMATION IN A BRIGHT, SHARP DISPLAY.
 
THE ABOVE ARE AN ARTIST'S RENDERINGS PREPARED FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY TO
DEMONSTRATE PROPOSED PRODUCTS AND POSSIBLE APPLICATIONS FOR THE COMPANY'S
TECHNOLOGY. THESE RENDERINGS DO NOT DEPICT ACTUAL PRODUCTS OR CURRENT
APPLICATIONS. THE COMPANY HAS BUILT ONLY PORTABLE AND TABLE-TOP PROTOTYPES TO
DATE.
THE PROTOTYPES ARE WORKING MODELS OF THE TECHNOLOGY AND ARE NOT INCORPORATED
INTO ANY PRODUCT CONFIGURATION OR DESIGNED FOR ANY SPECIFIC APPLICATION. SEE
"BUSINESS -- PROTOTYPES."
<PAGE>
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
- -------------------------------------------
                                     -------------------------------------------
 
    NO   PERSON  IS  AUTHORIZED   TO  GIVE  ANY  INFORMATION   OR  TO  MAKE  ANY
REPRESENTATION, OTHER THAN AS CONTAINED  IN THIS PROSPECTUS, IN CONNECTION  WITH
THE  OFFERING  CONTAINED HEREIN,  AND,  IF GIVEN  OR  MADE, SUCH  INFORMATION OR
REPRESENTATION MUST NOT BE RELIED UPON AS HAVING BEEN AUTHORIZED BY THE  COMPANY
OR  ANY UNDERWRITER. THIS PROSPECTUS DOES NOT  CONSTITUTE AN OFFER TO SELL, OR A
SOLICITATION OF AN OFFER TO BUY ANY SECURITIES IN ANY JURISDICTION TO ANY PERSON
TO WHOM IT IS UNLAWFUL TO MAKE SUCH OFFER OR SOLICITATION. NEITHER THE  DELIVERY
OF  THIS PROSPECTUS NOR ANY SALE  MADE HEREUNDER SHALL, UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES,
CREATE ANY IMPLICATION THAT  THE INFORMATION CONTAINED HEREIN  IS CORRECT AS  OF
ANY TIME SUBSEQUENT TO THE DATE HEREOF.
 
                              -------------------
 
                               TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
<TABLE>
<CAPTION>
                                                    PAGE
                                                    -----
<S>                                              <C>
Prospectus Summary.............................           3
Risk Factors...................................           7
Use of Proceeds................................          12
Dividend Policy................................          12
Capitalization.................................          13
Dilution.......................................          14
Management's Discussion and Analysis of
 Financial Condition and Results of
 Operations....................................          15
Business.......................................          18
Management.....................................          28
Principal Shareholders.........................          34
Certain Transactions...........................          35
Description of Securities......................          37
Shares Eligible for Future Sale................          43
Underwriting...................................          44
Legal Matters..................................          45
Experts........................................          45
Additional Information.........................          46
Index to Financial Statements..................         F-1
</TABLE>
 
                              -------------------
 
    UNTIL  SEPTEMBER 21, 1996 (25  DAYS AFTER THE DATE  OF THIS PROSPECTUS), ALL
DEALERS EFFECTING  TRANSACTIONS IN  THE  UNITS OFFERED  HEREBY, WHETHER  OR  NOT
PARTICIPATING  IN THIS  DISTRIBUTION, MAY BE  REQUIRED TO  DELIVER A PROSPECTUS.
THIS IS IN ADDITION TO  THE OBLIGATION OF DEALERS  TO DELIVER A PROSPECTUS  WHEN
ACTING   AS  UNDERWRITERS  AND  WITH  RESPECT  TO  THEIR  UNSOLD  ALLOTMENTS  OR
SUBSCRIPTIONS.
 
                                2,250,000 UNITS
 
                                   [SCANNED]
 
                       EACH UNIT CONSISTING OF ONE SHARE
                        OF COMMON STOCK AND ONE WARRANT
                     TO PURCHASE ONE SHARE OF COMMON STOCK
                             ---------------------
 
                                   PROSPECTUS
 
                             ---------------------
 
                               PAULSON INVESTMENT
                                 COMPANY, INC.
 
                       MARION BASS SECURITIES CORPORATION
 
                                AUGUST 27, 1996
 
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                                     -------------------------------------------
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                                     -------------------------------------------


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