As long as it is allowed in the state in which it’s registered (which it is, for example, in CA) you can drive it anywhere you’d like. Vehicles not registered in that state are not subject to the same laws about license plate display as vehicles registered in that state.
Some states have poorly worded laws that are never enforced (because it would be absurd) about out-of-state vehicles needing to have both plates even if they were only issued one by their registered state, but that would almost certainly not withstand federal scrutiny as it would be absurd.
More info here:
https://law.stackexchange.com/quest...car-without-front-tag-out-of-registered-state
So basically: if you have both the license plate wrap in a state in which it is legal to be registered in that way, you are free to drive it to any state you’d like, as they will not ticket you for plates that are outside their jurisdiction since the laws vary. Even if they did (which they won’t), you could fight it in court with a simple “my car is registered out of state, your honor, and my state allows the license plate wrap in lieu of a front metal plate,” and it would get dismissed.
(IANAL, this isn’t legal advice, and so on)