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Lighter, cooler headsets are coming, thanks to Qualcomm’s latest silicon

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At the Augmented World Expo (AWE) 2026, Qualcomm has unveiled its most premium mixed-reality chipset to date: the Snapdragon Reality Elite. Designed to power the next generation of immersive spatial computing, this new platform brings robust on-device generative AI, massive performance leaps, and the promise of lighter, cooler, and longer-lasting headsets to the consumer market.

It wouldn’t be a Qualcomm launch without some convoluted branding changes, so here we are. The Snapdragon Reality Elite is a new branding that builds on the Snapdragon XR2 Plus Gen 2 (seen on the Samsung Galaxy XR). Qualcomm uses the “Elite” branding for its most premium product in a category, and this remains the case here, too, for its Virtual and Mixed Reality-oriented SoCs. Don’t confuse the “Elite” branding for products packing the Oryon CPU, as that is not what it means, especially here.

Under the hood, the Snapdragon Reality Elite is a massive step up from the previous-generation XR2 Plus Gen 2. Qualcomm didn’t share specific architectural details, but it did mention that the Reality Elite can deliver up to 30% higher performance at the same power, or consume up to 45% less power for the same performance.

For your eyes, the Adreno GPU provides up to 60% better performance at the same power, supporting a stunning 4.4K resolution per eye at 90Hz. This means that digital content will blend with the physical world in sharper detail and smoother motion.

The Reality Elite platform also features an upgraded Hexagon NPU capable of delivering 48 TOPS (a 160% performance increase over previous gen), enabling interactive AI agents, photorealistic avatars, and real-time object generation directly on the device.

To make the “mixed” in mixed reality more convincing, the chip includes a dedicated Engine for Visual Analytics (EVA). This dedicated hardware block offloads computer vision tasks to reduce power consumption while dramatically improving video see-through (VST) latency and reducing real-world noise. The result is a more natural blending of digital elements with your physical environment, backed by enhanced head and hand tracking.

The cumulative efficiency gains mean that Qualcomm can promise up to 20% longer battery life and, more importantly, an SoC that can run up to 12°C cooler under load. These battery and thermal efficiencies are important, as they give manufacturers the confidence to design true all-in-one wireless smart glasses and headsets without relying on external pucks for compute and battery. Manufacturers can still opt for external pucks for their products if they prefer, as the platform offers flexibility.

Consumers won’t have to wait long to see this new silicon in action, as XREAL’s upcoming Project Aura (coming later this year) and a new device from Play for Dream will be among the first to utilize the Reality Elite platform. Additional products are expected to follow.

To speed up the arrival of new devices, Qualcomm has also introduced the Snapdragon START (Scalable Turnkey AI-Ready Toolkit) program. This initiative gives both tech companies and traditional eyewear brands a packaged, integrated module to quickly and easily build smart glasses.

While consumer entertainment and daily productivity are the primary targets, Snapdragon Reality Elite will also power enterprise applications, providing scalable solutions for industrial AR training, digital twins, and over-the-shoulder digital assistance.

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