Razer announced a concept AI wearable at CES that resembles a pair of wireless headphones (or Razer’s Barracuda gaming headsets, to be precise), with two camera lenses built into the ear cups.
The current iteration of Project Motoko is powered by an unspecified Qualcomm Snapdragon chip and uses dual first-person-view cameras positioned at eye level to capture objects, text, and anything else around you. There are also multiple microphones for receiving voice commands, dialogue, and environmental audio, and hands-free controls for managing audio settings.
Motoko is designed to be compatible with all major AI models, including those from OpenAI, Google Gemini, and Grok. The wearable “interprets and responds instantly, acting as a full-time AI assistant that adapts to schedules, preferences, and habits,” according to Razer, and will be able to understand context “instantly.”
It’s a design that makes a lot of sense. Headphones are already commonplace, so you wouldn’t attract any unwanted attention for wearing some weird-looking gadget, and the size provides plenty of internal space for Razer to work with. The company believes a headphone form factor is superior to glasses for an AI wearable and says there’s an “untapped” market of 1.4 billion headset users.
Just remember: this is a concept design and has no guarantee of becoming a real product. For every concept project that Razer has officially released, many more have yet to manifest into something you can actually buy.








