Kylie Jenner is the face of Meta’s latest wearable push: the Meta Starfire Kylie Edition smart glasses. The pitch is simple. A familiar accessory becomes a hands-free way to capture, listen, and interact with AI throughout the day.
These glasses follow Meta’s recent movement towards devices that shift computing away from phones and into wearables. What changes here is not the core tech, but how it is packaged and presented.
The design is deliberately understated. Slim, oval frames. Minimal hardware visibility. A small gem detail adds a styling cue, but the overall look stays close to regular eyewear. The intent is for the device to blend into daily wear, not stand out as tech.
Functionally, the glasses cover a familiar set of features. A built-in camera allows for photos and videos without using a phone. Open-ear speakers handle audio. Microphones support calls and voice commands. Meta AI is integrated for quick responses, navigation, and general queries. Features like live translation and contextual prompts extend what the device can do in real time.
Interaction is voice-led. Users can ask questions or trigger actions without touching a screen. In this edition, responses can also be delivered in Kylie Jenner’s voice. That choice shifts the experience from a neutral assistant tone to something more branded and personality-driven.
The glasses also support everyday actions like music control, content capture, and quick sharing. The goal is to reduce the steps between seeing something and recording it, or between thinking of a request and acting on it.
The result is a device that sits in a familiar category but pushes harder on integration and presence. It keeps the phone-level functions users already know, then moves them into a continuous, voice-first interface.







