Defining Agentic AI in Smart Glasses
Agentic AI in smart glasses refers to AI systems that can understand context, plan multi-step actions, and execute tasks autonomously on wearable devices, moving beyond simple command–response interactions to behave more like continuous personal assistants that monitor, anticipate, and coordinate activities on the user’s behalf. Rokid’s decision to integrate Gemini Flash 3.5 into its smart eyewear puts this idea at the centre of its roadmap for agentic AI wearables. Instead of limiting smart glasses AI to answering questions or transcribing speech, Rokid wants its glasses to chain actions, manage workflows, and remain context-aware over time. This shift aligns with Google’s I/O focus on personal AI agents and suggests that smart glasses are becoming the testing ground for autonomous wearable agents. The glasses, rather than the smartphone, become the primary interface for always-available AI that sees and hears what the user does.

Gemini Flash 3.5 and Real-Time Wearable Intelligence
By adopting Gemini Flash 3.5, Rokid is targeting faster, more context-rich responses that suit real-time wearable use. The model is designed for snappy performance, which matters when a smart glasses AI must interpret speech, surroundings, and past interactions without lag. Rokid says users can expect higher precision and deeper contextual understanding, helping them complete complex tasks through simple voice prompts. In practice, that could mean an autonomous wearable agent that tracks ongoing projects, remembers prior instructions, and acts across apps without repeated user guidance. According to Rokid, Gemini 3.5 Flash is an “important foundation” for its next generation of experiences, anchoring both conversational assistance and more continuous, agentic behavior. For smart glasses AI, performance is not only about speed but also about staying aware of what the user is doing throughout the day, and this upgrade is meant to support that shift.
From Voice Assistants to Autonomous Wearable Agents
Most smart glasses to date have functioned like voice-controlled accessories: they respond when asked, then wait passively. Rokid’s emphasis on agentic AI wearables signals a move toward glasses that act on their own, within user-defined boundaries. Through its Rizon platform, Rokid supports AI agents that can chain tasks and automate workflows, allowing users and developers to design routines that run continuously in the background. The company reports more than 3,000 workflow submissions and over 400 approvals in its Rokid Agent Store, indicating an emerging marketplace for autonomous wearable agents. These agents could coordinate reminders, summarize ongoing conversations, or sequence workplace procedures without repeated prompts. Instead of a single monolithic assistant, smart glasses become a container for many specialized agents. That approach brings the autonomy of desktop automation or smartphone shortcuts directly into the field of view, wherever the user happens to be.
Rokid’s Multi-Model Strategy and Competitive Landscape
Rokid’s Gemini Flash 3.5 integration sits within a broader strategy of multi-model smart glasses AI. Its devices already support Google Gemini, OpenAI ChatGPT, DeepSeek, and Qwen, giving users and developers flexibility as AI ecosystems fragment into competing platforms. This multi-model stance is a differentiator in a smart glasses market where many rivals tie hardware closely to a single AI stack. Rokid’s long collaboration with Google also extends into accessibility, with work on features for users with vision and hearing impairments. That focus helps ground the more speculative promise of always-on AI companions in practical use cases. At the same time, the company faces the same challenge as every smart glasses maker: making “AI on your face” something people are comfortable wearing daily. Still, as agentic AI becomes more capable, eyewear is emerging as a natural interface for continuous, ambient assistance rather than another screen to check.
