If you use Rokid glasses, you already know the awkward dance of tapping the temple arm to navigate menus. It works, but it's not subtle — and anyone watching you can see exactly what you're doing. The SGG RING (Rokid RGR06) changes that. It's a Bluetooth controller that sits on your finger, letting you scroll, tap, swipe, and trigger Rokid's AI assistant with micro-gestures that nobody else notices.
What it actually does
The RGR06 connects to your Rokid glasses over Bluetooth 5.3 and maps finger gestures to system controls. The gesture set is simple enough to learn in five minutes:
- Single tap — select or confirm (equivalent to pressing the temple touchpad)
- Double tap — go back or dismiss
- Long press — trigger Rokid's AI assistant
- Swipe up/down — scroll through menus, apps, pages
- Media controls — play, pause, skip tracks, adjust volume
- Camera — take a photo or start recording
The trackpad surface on top of the ring is small — roughly the size of a shirt button — but it's responsive enough that you stop thinking about it after an hour. The haptic feedback is subtle: a tiny vibration confirms each action so you don't have to look at your glasses to know something registered.
Battery and charging
The ring itself holds a 40 mAh battery — enough for roughly five to seven days of normal use (a few hours of active control per day). When it dies, drop it in the included charging case, which doubles as a phone stand. The case holds 250 mAh, enough to recharge the ring about five times before the case itself needs a USB-C charge. Total ecosystem battery life, including top-ups from the case, is roughly 82 hours of active use according to Rokid's specs.
Charging time is about 90 minutes for either the ring or the case. It's not fast-charge, but given the multi-day battery, you'll rarely think about it.
Who this is actually for
This isn't for everyone who owns Rokid glasses. If you mostly use your glasses at a desk and don't mind reaching up to tap the temple, the ring is a convenience, not a necessity. But there are situations where it genuinely changes how you use the glasses:
- Presentations and meetings. Advance slides, control media, or trigger AI without anyone seeing you touch your face. This is the number-one use case from the reviews we've read.
- Commuting. Control music and calls with one hand while the other holds a bag or grips a handrail. Subtle enough for public transit.
- Cooking or working with your hands. Scroll a recipe or answer a call when your hands are messy or gloved.
- Accessibility. If reaching up to your temple is uncomfortable or difficult, a finger-level controller is a genuine quality-of-life improvement.
Fit and comfort
The ring ships in US sizes 7 through 11. The body is matte black anodized aluminum with a polycarbonate section — lighter than a typical metal ring but still solid enough that it doesn't feel like a toy. Most people wear it on the index or middle finger of their dominant hand for the best trackpad reach.
At about 6 grams, you genuinely forget you're wearing it. It's slim enough to sit alongside a wedding band or other ring without looking bulky. The IP54 water resistance means sweat, rain, and hand-washing are fine — just don't go swimming with it.
What's in the box
- 1 × RGR06 ring (Bluetooth controller)
- 1 × charging case / phone stand
- 1 × USB receiver dongle
- 1 × USB-C charging cable
- 1 × instruction manual
Compatibility
Works with Rokid Max, Rokid Max Pro, Rokid Max 2, Rokid Station, Rokid AR Lite, and all Rokid AI glasses running Rokid OS 2.0 or later. It's Rokid-only — it won't pair with XREAL, Ray-Ban Meta, or other brands.
Technical specs
- Bluetooth 5.3, Class II (−6 to +4 dBm)
- Frequency: 2.40–2.48 GHz
- Range: up to 10 meters
- Ring battery: 40 mAh (ring) / 250 mAh (case)
- Water resistance: IP54
- Sizes: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11 (US)
The honest take
The RGR06 is one of those accessories that sounds gimmicky until you actually use it. The first time you discreetly skip a song on the train without lifting your hand to your face, you get it. The gesture set is limited compared to, say, a full touchpad, but it covers 95% of what you'd actually want to do with Rokid glasses. The charging case is a nice touch — it means you can toss the ring in your bag and know it'll be charged when you need it.
If you use your Rokid glasses daily and find yourself frequently reaching up to the temple for controls, this is a $59.99 upgrade that makes the whole system feel more polished. If you're a casual user, it's a nice-to-have but not essential.