“AI glasses” is no longer a novelty phrase at CES. Almost every hall has a version of them, some bulky, some flashy, some clearly still experimental. Rokid, as one of the most popular glasses brands that went viral last year, showed us that something more subtle and, frankly, harder to achieve: lightness, was crucial.

Both in grams and in how little mental effort it took to wear and use the products.
Rokid showcased two AI glasses experiences at CES 2026: Rokid Glasses and Rokid Ai Glasses Style. And while they differ in configuration, they share a common trait that defined my time with them: they disappear faster than you expect.
My first demo was with Rokid Glasses, the company’s full-function AI & AR smart glasses with a display. At 49 grams, the number sounds impressive on paper, but felt way more impressive in hand, and on my face.
That’s not something I can say for most display-equipped smart glasses. Usually, you’re constantly aware of pressure points on the nose bridge, behind the ears, or along the temples. With Rokid Glasses, the balance is really intentional. The glasses sat naturally, without pulling forward or demanding adjustment.
The interface itself followed the same philosophy. Information appeared only when needed: live translation caption beneath, transcription when speaking, navigation cues when walking. The display doesn’t try to dominate my vision or pull attention away from the environment. It behaved more like a quiet layer of assistance.
If Rokid Glasses fade from awareness after a bit, Rokid Ai Glasses Style do it almost immediately. At 38.5 grams, these glasses are insanely lightweight. There’s no display here, just voice interaction, audio feedback, physical controls, and AI working quietly in the background.
Using Style felt like having AI available without having to ask for attention. Voice commands triggered translation, reminders, and assistance naturally. I didn’t feel compelled to “check” anything.

One detail worth noting is the DIY replaceable lens system. Unlike magnet-based approaches on the Rokid Glasses (which are impressive in their own right), these lenses are manually interchangeable and can be easily replaced at any optics store, showing that they are meant to be worn daily, handled normally, and customized over time.
In my opinion, both glasses are designed around the same core idea: to reduce friction.
- Reduce physical friction by minimizing weight and improving balance.
- Reduce cognitive friction by limiting unnecessary prompts and visuals.
- Reduce behavioral friction by fitting into routines instead of disrupting them.
After stepping away from the booth, what stayed with me wasn’t a feature list or a headline spec. It was the feeling that these glasses didn’t ask much of me at all. And in the long road toward mainstream wearable AI adoption, that might be the most important feature of all.






