- A benchmark for the project Moohan -Headsset has been viewed
- It points to Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 for the CPU
- The headset is expected to be launched in the second half of the year
We are getting closer and closer to the launch of Project Moohan, where the Android XR (extended reality) headset is being worked on by Google and Samsung – and a fresh leak may have revealed the chipset that the device will be driven by.
A benchmark discovered on the web by Tipster @yabhishekhd (via Gsmarena) that matched the model number of Project Moohan has revealed details pointing to the very skilled Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 is the processor inside.
We already knew that the device would run a chipset made of Qualcomm, but now we have a great idea of the specific model. Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 was announced early in 2024 and has previously been linked to the Google and Samsung headset.
This same benchmark shows that the MOOHAN device could run Android 14, specifically adapted to Virtual and Augmented Reality, and will be equipped with 16 GB of RAM on board.
What we expect
Samsung’s XR project Moohan SM-I610 Pleted on Geekbench with Adreno 740 GPU.Specifications🔳 6-core of 2.36 GHz🎮 Adreno 740 GPU (Adreno 740 GPU is integrated with Qualcomms Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, but here it seems to be part of another chipset/soc.) pic.twitter.com/yfnxh45zrmMay 27, 2025
The Snapdragon XR2+ Gen 2 is largely a chipset built for this kind of device that supports full-color-through-through latency Wi-Fi 7 and several specialist reality technologies, including a Space Warp feature trying to reduce movement disease.
We were actually able to try Project Moohan on Google I/O 2025 and reported that the tight Gemini AI integration is currently the prominent feature. In our demo, it identified the nature of a tree directly in front and gave a few facts about it.
Google and Samsung use the XR brand to include a number of virtual reality, mixed reality and augmented reality experiences. These are basically different combinations of completely closed digital worlds, and digital graphics overlaid in the real world.
Other Android XR devices are on the way, including smart glasses that turn much more towards the augmented reality -end of the XR spectrum. These pieces of hardware should start launching over the second half of the year.