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Samsung’s ‘Project Mohan’ leaks as Galaxy XR — complete with renders, screenshots, and full specs

Samsung’s ‘Project Mohan’ leaks as Galaxy XR — complete with renders, screenshots, and full specs

Samsung is finally nearing the official reveal of its long-rumored “Project Mohan” headset. But if you can’t wait until its expected unveiling later this month, a massive new leak of renders and screenshots might just satisfy your curiosity.

According to Android Headlines, the leaked materials refer to the device as “Galaxy XR,” which is believed to be the official name for Project Mohan. Based on the leaks, the headset appears to be the Apple Vision Pro rival many anticipated. The Galaxy XR has already made a few quiet appearances — Samsung teased it during the Galaxy S25 launch event and Mobile World Congress, while early prototypes were tested hands-on by select reviewers late last year. These newly surfaced renders — reportedly sourced from within Samsung — show the device from nearly every possible angle.

In terms of overall design, the Galaxy XR follows the familiar formula of modern VR/XR headsets. It features dual lenses housing a 4K micro-OLED display hidden beneath a sleek visor, a tension-adjustable rear strap for a snug fit, and an external battery pack to keep most of the weight off the user’s face.

Samsung’s ‘Project Mohan’ leaks as Galaxy XR — complete with renders, screenshots, and full specs

One leaked image shows how the headset fits on a person’s head — in a style that feels distinctly reminiscent of Apple’s design philosophy. It’s clear this is closer to a Meta Quest-style mixed reality headset than the lightweight “smart glasses” vision that the Android XR platform had once promised.

The leak also includes several UI screenshots, showing what’s described as “One UI XR” — Samsung’s XR-specific operating system built on Google’s upcoming headset software. The interface looks clean and minimal, featuring a home screen populated with Samsung and Google apps, plus third-party titles like Netflix and Calm. A menu bar along the top provides access to the home panel, Google Search, Gemini AI assistant, notifications, and system settings — alongside the standard date and time display.

Spec-wise, the Galaxy XR is reportedly powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 processor, first announced nearly two years ago. The micro-OLED panel boasts around 6 million more pixels than the one in Apple’s Vision Pro. For tracking, the headset employs six sensors (four front-facing and two downward-facing) for hand tracking, a depth sensor mounted on the front, and four eye-tracking cameras arranged around the lenses.

Voice commands are also supported, with multiple microphones positioned around the chassis, and two dedicated controllers will ship in the box for gaming and interaction.

All of this adds up to a total weight of about 545 grams, making it roughly 50–100 grams lighter than Apple’s Vision Pro. The tradeoff is likely a smaller battery, estimated to last around two hours of general use, or slightly longer during video playback — though probably not long enough for a full screening of Avatar: The Way of Water.

Samsung’s Galaxy XR headset is rumored to launch by the end of this month. If the leaks are accurate, you might want to start counting your savings — this could be Samsung’s most ambitious hardware debut in years.

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