Can Samsung and Gentle Monster finally make smart glasses cool?
For years, smart glasses have existed in a kind of aesthetic purgatory: too techy for fashion people, too awkward for mainstream consumers, and often associated with the exact kind of guy who makes everyone in the coffee shop (or Pilates class) extremely uncomfortable. Even when tech bros promised that smart eyewear represented the future, the frames themselves rarely looked like something anyone actually wanted to wear outside a product demo.
That’s why Google and Samsung’s new collaboration with South Korean luxury eyewear label Gentle Monster feels notable. More than a tech announcement, the partnership signals a broader shift in how Silicon Valley is approaching wearable AI: by finally admitting that people care what these things look like.
Unveiled during Google I/O 2026, the collaboration marks the first public reveal of Google’s Android XR smart glasses developed with Gentle Monster and Samsung. The glasses, arriving later this year, will feature built-in speakers, microphones, and a camera, allowing wearers to listen to music, take calls, snap photos, and interact with Google’s Gemini AI assistant hands-free.
But the actual technology almost feels secondary to the pitch; these are smart glasses designed to be stylish first.
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Google and Samsung unveiled the first design from their intelligent eyewear collaboration with Gentle Monster.
Credit: Samsung
And unlike earlier attempts at wearable tech, they actually look fashionable. The slim oval-shaped black frames and narrow tinted lenses lean fully into Gentle Monster’s signature aesthetic: sleek, slightly futuristic, and unmistakably fashion-forward. Instead of looking like conspicuous gadgets, the glasses resemble the kind of Y2K-inspired eyewear already dominating runways, K-pop airport photos, and downtown street style. They feel less like a Silicon Valley prototype and more like a cool girl accessory. Expect celebs and creators to start styling these immediately.
Pricing remains a mystery — though given Gentle Monster’s positioning in the luxury market, these likely won’t be impulse-buy territory. The brand’s regular eyewear already tends to hover between roughly $250 and $400, with some statement styles climbing even higher.
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“We believe that for intelligent eyewear to become part of people’s daily lives, it first must be great eyewear,” Juston Payne, senior director of product management for Android XR at Google, told fashion trade WWD. “Eyewear is very personal — it is part of how people project who they are to the world.”
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That sentiment represents a major departure from earlier generations of wearable tech, which often prioritized utility over aesthetics. Products like Google Glass became cultural punchlines partly because they looked alienating and conspicuously futuristic. Wearing them announced not just that you liked technology, but that you wanted everyone else to know it.
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Diane von Furstenberg wears a pair of limited-edition DVF | Made for Glass Google Inc. glasses in 2014.
Credit: Scott Eells/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Meta tech exec Andrew Bosworth wears a pair of Ray-Ban Meta glasses in 2024.
Credit: David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images
The newer generation of smart glasses has taken a different route. Meta found success with its Ray-Ban collaboration by embedding cameras and AI features into familiar silhouettes instead of reinventing eyewear entirely. Now Google appears to be pushing even further into fashion territory by partnering with a brand that already possesses cultural credibility beyond tech circles.
That credibility is exactly what made Gentle Monster such an inspired choice. Over the past decade, the Seoul-based label has become known for its experimental silhouettes, celebrity co-signs, and immersive retail spaces that feel more like art installations than optical stores. The brand’s oversized frames and sculptural designs have turned eyewear into a genuine fashion statement, embraced by K-pop idols like BLACKPINK’s Jennie and Stray Kids’ Felix, models, and fashion obsessives alike.

The Gentle Monster (left) and Warby Parker (right) Android XR smart glasses made in partnership with Google and Samsung.
Credit: Samsung
Google clearly understands what Gentle Monster brings to the table. “We have admired Gentle Monster’s work for many years,” Payne told WWD, praising the brand’s “iconoclastic approach” and ability to create emotional experiences around eyewear.
And honestly, that emotional connection may be the missing ingredient smart glasses have needed all along. Consumers were never going to embrace AI eyewear if the frames made them feel self-conscious.
That’s especially true as AI hardware increasingly moves from novelty gadgets to lifestyle accessories. Smart glasses aren’t being marketed as replacements for phones anymore, but as seamless extensions of existing digital habits. Google says Gemini will work alongside users’ phones and apps, allowing wearers to interact with information while remaining visually engaged with the world around them.
But functionality alone won’t sell this category. Style will.
And for perhaps the first time, tech companies seem to understand that the future of wearable AI may depend less on convincing people that smart glasses are useful — and more on convincing people they look cool. The catch is that the more invisible and stylish the technology becomes, the easier it may be to overlook the privacy concerns built into it.
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