CES 2026: Razer's AI now lives in a glowing desk jar, judges your gameplay and helps with life too
Razer 's betting gamers want their AI assistant in a jar. Project AVA debuted at CES 2026 as a 5.5-inch holographic companion that sits on your desk, coaches your gameplay, and organizes your life—all while living inside a glowing cylindrical device that screams "gamer aesthetic."
The hardware packs dual far-field mics, an HD camera, and connects to Windows PCs via USB-C for what Razer calls "PC Vision Mode." This lets AVA analyze your screen in real-time, whether you're stuck in a Battlefield 6 loadout menu or grinding through spreadsheets. The current build runs xAI's Grok engine, though Razer promises future compatibility with other AI platforms, including their own. Your holographic buddy can be a supportive catgirl, an esports legend, or an influencerHere's where it gets interesting. You're not stuck with one character—AVA offers five distinct avatars developed with Animation Inc. There's the efficient default AVA, supportive catgirl KIRA, tattooed strategist ZANE, esports legend FAKER, and influencer-inspired SAO. Each features motion-tracked facial expressions and eye movements that respond during conversations.

Beyond gaming advice that supposedly won't violate terms of service, AVA handles scheduling, wellness tracking, translation, and professional consulting. Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan told Bloomberg this isn't about fostering romantic relationships, though the company acknowledges people use AI "in a more personal way." That's corporate speak for "we know what you're thinking, but officially, no."
Project AVA ships second half of 2026. US customers can reserve one now with a $20 refundable deposit through Razer's website, though final pricing remains undisclosed. Whether desk holograms become the next frontier or another quirky CES footnote depends entirely on how many people want their backseat gamer to be, well, a little cute.
The hardware packs dual far-field mics, an HD camera, and connects to Windows PCs via USB-C for what Razer calls "PC Vision Mode." This lets AVA analyze your screen in real-time, whether you're stuck in a Battlefield 6 loadout menu or grinding through spreadsheets. The current build runs xAI's Grok engine, though Razer promises future compatibility with other AI platforms, including their own. Your holographic buddy can be a supportive catgirl, an esports legend, or an influencerHere's where it gets interesting. You're not stuck with one character—AVA offers five distinct avatars developed with Animation Inc. There's the efficient default AVA, supportive catgirl KIRA, tattooed strategist ZANE, esports legend FAKER, and influencer-inspired SAO. Each features motion-tracked facial expressions and eye movements that respond during conversations.
Beyond gaming advice that supposedly won't violate terms of service, AVA handles scheduling, wellness tracking, translation, and professional consulting. Razer CEO Min-Liang Tan told Bloomberg this isn't about fostering romantic relationships, though the company acknowledges people use AI "in a more personal way." That's corporate speak for "we know what you're thinking, but officially, no."
Project AVA ships second half of 2026. US customers can reserve one now with a $20 refundable deposit through Razer's website, though final pricing remains undisclosed. Whether desk holograms become the next frontier or another quirky CES footnote depends entirely on how many people want their backseat gamer to be, well, a little cute.
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