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Snap’s AR glasses inch closer to reality with Qualcomm Snapdragon chips

Snap is betting on Qualcomm to make its AR glasses more real

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Snapchat Gen 5 spectacles
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Snap’s AR glasses ambitions might be starting to look a lot more real. In an official announcement, Snap has said it has expanded its partnership with Qualcomm through a multi-year strategic agreement that will bring Qualcomm’s Snapdragon silicon to future generations of Specs.

The company describes this as the first flagship engagement for Specs Inc, which will be launching Specs wearable later this year.

What was revealed in the announcement

According to Snap, future Specs devices will run on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon XR platforms, while the company says it will provide the foundation for edge AI, on-device processing, advanced graphics, and lower-power performance. Snap is framing this mix as essential for building AR glasses.

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Snap is clearly trying to position Specs like an always-on computer instead of the tethered demos.

Why this actually matters for Snap

Sony has been working on AR eyewear for years through Spectacles, but this latset announcement seems more serious because it is tied to a long-term hardware roadmap. The company says its collaboration with Qualcomm already stretches back more than five years, with Snapdragon platforms having powered multiple earlier generation of Spectacles.

So the new agreement is meant to provide a more predictable foundations for developers and partners building apps for the platform. Snap also added that the collaboration will focus on things like on-device AI, improved graphics, and advanced multiuser digital experiences. In simplers terms, Snap is saying it wants its glasses to handle AR interactions without feeling slow, power-hungry, or dependent on a phone.

There is still a lot that Snap isn’t saying yet. The company hasn’t shared detailed consumer hardware specs, pricing, or launch timing beyond later in 2026. Though, Snap clearly wants developers and buyers to see Specs as a long-term computing platform, and Qualcomm is now being positioned as the chip partner that could help make it possible.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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