- Rokid’s new AI Glasses Style can be pre-ordered
- The AI-powered sunglasses do not have a screen and use voice commands
- Rokid AI Glasses Style is powered by ChatGPT-5
Screenless AI wearables are quietly having a moment – and Rokid’s new AI glasses style may be the clearest sign yet of where smart glasses are headed.
Launched at CES as a new competitor to Meta’s Ray-Ban AI glasses, the Rokid AI Glasses Style ditches the screen and lowers the price in the process. And while the Rokid AI Glasses Style don’t carry the Ray-Ban logo on the frame, they look strikingly similar to the Metas AI glasses.
Interestingly, the Rokid AI Glasses Style are designed without a display at all, allowing them to remain lightweight at just 38.5g. At $299, they’re also $80 cheaper than Meta’s offering.
Rokid AI Glasses Style is activated with a simple voice command – “Hey Rokid”. They’re designed for voice-first AI tasks like asking about what you’re seeing, translating conversations in real-time, and summarizing meetings—all without pulling out your phone.
It all works thanks to its built-in AI assistant powered by ChatGPT-5.
All-day battery
Using the built-in 12 MP camera, you can take pictures via a spoken command – “Hey Rokid, take a picture” – or record 4K video logs hands-free.
The glasses offer up to 12 hours of battery life, which should be enough to get you through a full day. There’s also an optional 3,000mAh charging case and a 1,700mAh capsule battery for extended use.
Rokid AI Glasses Style is available now for pre-order, giving you priority shipping and a $20 discount. The glasses can also be fitted with prescription lenses in a range of colours.
Say goodbye to your phone in 20206?
While screenless AI devices have been around for some time, they have so far failed to capture the public’s imagination. That seems to be changing and we are reaching something of a tipping point.
The shift arguably began with the announcement of the upcoming ChatGPT portable device from OpenAI, designed by Jony Ive. The device is rumored to arrive in the first quarter of 2026. As this year’s CES is already showing, screenless AI devices could lead the next wave of hardware.
Razer just unveiled its Motoko headphones at CES — an audio-first wearable that can “see” the world around you but communicate solely through voice — and now Rokid has announced AI-powered screenless glasses that look like they could give Meta’s Ray-Ban sunglasses a real run for their money.
If Rokid is right, 2026 isn’t about replacing your phone. It’s about needing it a little less as long as the sun is out.
TechRadar will extensively cover this year’s CESand will bring you all the big announcements as they happen. Head over to ours CES 2026 news page for the latest stories and our hands-on verdicts on everything from wireless TVs and foldable screens to new phones, laptops, smart home gadgets and the latest in artificial intelligence. You can also ask us a question about the show in our CES 2026 live Q&A and we will do our best to answer it.
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