The Foreo UFO 2 isn't an alien ship — it's the sheet mask's smarter sibling

Imagine a sheet mask that could deliver warming, cooling, and vibration sensations.
 By 
Jennimai Nguyen
 on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.

Beauty calls. In Beauty, Hacked, we test drive the latest skincare, makeup, hair, and wellness tech while exploring the pageantry of beauty on the internet.


Sheet masks are an affordable, no frills at-home facial treatment that are widely popular. So why not make them expensive and highly technological?

The Foreo UFO 2 does exactly this. For $299, the device promises to turn your regular ol' sheet mask into a delivery vessel for thermotherapy, cryotherapy, T-Sonic pulsations, and LED light therapy. And to top it all off, it accomplishes all of these tasks in less than two minutes.

Pink puck with gold center featuring the word "Foreo."
The UFO 2, a small yet mighty device. Credit: Foreo

The device works by either attaching one of Foreo's "smart masks" — which seem to be extremely similar to a regular sheet mask, just cut into a small circle shape — to the bottom of the UFO 2, and then gliding it over the face while following along with an app-based tutorial; or by simply running it over your own store-bought sheet mask. While following the app's guidance and programming, the UFO 2 cycles through moments of heat, coolness, vibrations, and different colored lights. At the end of the two-minute routine, the ingredients of your sheet mask or Foreo smart mask should be deeply penetrated into your skin.


You May Also Like

The therapies that the UFO 2 purports are not all that novel in skin care. Thermotherapy refers to gently heating up the skin, which should help active ingredients in skin care absorb deeper and more easily beneath the surface. And as Dr. Taruna Yadav, senior Ayurveda expert, explained to Vogue, heat also generally increases blood flow in skin, which can help repair damaged tissue.

Woman opening a large cryotherapy chamber with smoke billowing out of the bottom. Another woman in a robe approaches.
What people typically associate with cryotherapy, which features a whole body chamber to pump liquid nitrogen for two to three minutes. Credit: Getty Images/jacoblund

Cryotherapy usually refers to extreme cooling accomplished by liquid nitrogen. Most people think of it as a whole body experience involving an extreme cooling chamber that you step into, with the treatment popularized for athletic and muscular health. In cosmetics, the liquid nitrogen is pumped over your face for a few minutes, causing the blood vessels to contract and pores to tighten. When your face returns to its normal temperature, the blood vessels dilate quickly, increasing the blood and oxygen flow in your face, which results in an instant glow and a decrease in any swelling.

T-Sonic pulsations are unique to the Foreo brand, implemented in many of their wellness devices. The tech is a signature massage technology that uses transdermal vibrations in order to temporarily dilate pores, which should also help products absorb quicker and deeper into the skin. And LED light therapy, as we learned in a previous episode, can help fight acne and wrinkles due to various wavelengths interacting with skin cells.

It's a lot of different skincare practices rolled into one, and it's all impressively accomplished in a super short time period. Can the UFO 2 actually do it all? Is its version of cryotherapy as intense as it seems it could be? And is it really worth the hefty price tag just to use a sheet mask in a new way?

Tune in here to Beauty, Hacked's latest episode, where host Jennimai Nguyen will answer these questions and more, all while wearing her coziest spa headband.

Topics Beauty

Mashable Image
Jennimai Nguyen

Jennimai is a tech reporter at Mashable covering digital culture, social media, and how we interact with our everyday tech. She also hosts Mashable’s Snapchat Discover channel and TikTok, so she naturally spends way too much time scrolling the FYP and thinking about iPhones.

Mashable Potato

More from Beauty, Hacked
A TikTok hack claims to give you a cheap, trendy manicure. Nail techs are begging you not to do it.
Composite image of TikTok screenshots showing two women with a warning message on the screen, and a press on nail manicure.

Opulus makes retinol somehow simple via adorable little pods
A woman with the Opulus retinol product.

Electroshocking your face isn't as scary as it sounds
A woman using electric current to sculpt her face.

Skin cycling is the TikTok trend that's demystifying active skincare
Composite image of three different skincare product groupings, with words "exfoliate, retinoid, recover"

3D printing meets beauty with the Mink Makeup Printer
Two women wearing eyeshadow and a small white printer superimposed over an eyeshadow palette background.

Recommended For You
Get great skin with the iRestore LED Face Mask for its lowest price ever
iRestore LED Face Mask on teal and orange abstract background

Super Bowl 2026 cheat sheet: Players, performers, storylines to watch
iillustration showing sam darnold, bad bunny, and drake maye


Travel smarter with these earbuds that translate over 50 languages in real time
Mymanu Orb Open-Ear AI Translation Earbuds

Work smarter with side-by-side results from today’s top AI models thanks to this tool
ChatPlayground AI: Lifetime Subscription (Unlimited Plan)

Trending on Mashable
NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for April 3, 2026
Connections game on a smartphone

Wordle today: Answer, hints for April 3, 2026
Wordle game on a smartphone

NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for April 2, 2026
Connections game on a smartphone

What's new to streaming this week? (April 3, 2026)
A composite of images from film and TV streaming this week.

The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!