Kim Kardashian Shows Off Massive Diamond Rings Alongside Her New Tesla Humanoid Robot

Kim Kardashian wore not one, but two giant diamond rings while meeting her “new friend” Optimus, Tesla’s humanoid robot. 

Kim Kardashian is keeping up with the finer things.

Case in point: Her recent encounter with the latest version of Tesla’s Optimus robot. The Kardashians star not only got a private meeting with the robotic humanoid—which was designed to serve as a personal assistant “performing unsafe, repetitive or boring tasks,” according to the tech comany’s website—but she got to test it out in style.

As seen in videos posted to her social media accounts Nov. 18, Kim—wearing two massive diamond rings on her fingers—was able to command the robot to complete the other half of her heart hands.

One of rings appeared to be an emerald cut diamond resting on a chunky platinum band, while the other piece of jewelry looked to be studded with smaller gems as it wrapped around her finger.

“Can you blow a kiss?” she asked the robot, before the machine moved its hand to its face. “Yeah! You’re so cute!”

Kim added in the caption, “Meet my new friend.”

In another clip, Kim unboxed a gold version of the black-and-white robot, writing, “Only one gold one exists.”

Kim Kardashian, Tesla OptimusInstagram/Kim Kardashian

But the tech toys didn’t stop there. She also took a spin inside the Cybercab, a driverless taxi.

“The Cybercab is insane,” she said in a third video, noting design  similarities between the robotic car and another vehicle she already has in her personal garage. “It kinda looks like the rims on my silver Cybertruck.”

Indeed, Kim does own at least one Cybertruck. And in true Kim fashion, she added her personal touch to the electric car by getting it customized in matte black—a color option that is unavailable off the assembly line due to its stainless steel frame.

Kim Kardashian, InstagramInstagram/Kim Kardashian

As for Optimus? The robot has yet to hit the market, though Tesla CEO Elon Musk previously said that it’ll cost somewhere between $20,000 and $30,000 when it moves into “limited production” in 2025.

“I’m a helpful accelerant to that future,” he said in June, per CNBC. “What really matters is, can we be much faster than everyone else and our product be done a few years before theirs and be better.”