If you are looking to today, you will likely find nothing but "scam" warnings or counterfeit listings .

However, as the months turned into years, tech experts began to point out massive :

In 2014, a sleek promotional video took the internet by storm. It showed a thin rubber wristband that could project a fully functional onto the user’s forearm. In the video, people scrolled through emails, played games, and answered calls directly on their skin—even while in the bath. It looked like the ultimate "smartphone killer." The Hype and the Hurdles

The story of the is a fascinating, if cautionary, tale from the era of "crowdfunded dreams." It represents the gap between a viral concept and technical reality . The Vision

Projectors struggle to remain visible in daylight.

Today, the "Cicret" name is often used by third-party sellers on sites like Alibaba or eBay to sell or low-end smartbands that do not actually project a screen onto your arm.

The original company struggled to move past the prototype stage. While they occasionally posted "proof of concept" videos, the technology never reached a level that matched the sleekness of the original trailer. Eventually, the project went quiet, leaving many early backers without a product or a refund.