I bought my wife Smith ChromoPop I/O goggles with Storm and Sun lens. I put the Storm lens in for her as she has lots of trouble with low light conditions. She has various eye ailments that complicate the matter. She immediately saw a difference in the ability to see the surface and contours of the snow in challenging light. She has tried and purchased many a goggles that were purported to be the best for low light, but these CromoPops, so far, have been the best.
She lent them to a female friend who has her own challenges with seeing through goggles ( also various lenses and makes and models tried ) to the point that she usually skis with her goggles off in low light - which no one who skis with her can understand, since to anyone else, the wind produced tears and would seem to make it harder to see than any fault of the goggle lens - but that that's what gets her through. She took a couple of runs with my wife's CromoPop Storms and she kept the goggles on, which is a testament right there. She asked how much they cost, and when I told her she stated: "Worth every penny". She bought a pair
I got a chance to try them last weekend myself in various conditions, from fog, to low light, to sun. I usually do not have a problem seeing in all but the foggiest of days. No matter what the lenses, or the conditions, I usually see the snow surface fine enough to ski uncompromised. With the ChromoPop, I saw a difference in clarity and the ability to see the nuances of the snow surface. I bought myself a pair even though I wasn't in the market for new goggles.
See is believing, apparently.