Samsung’s Samsung XR smart glasses are starting to look like a pair, not a single product. A new leak from GalaxyClub points to two versions of “Galaxy Glasses,” listed as SM-O200P and SM-O200J.
That matters because a model split can change what you actually end up buying. It can also decide which version lands in your country first. For now, the leak doesn’t spell out what separates the two.
A few spec crumbs do show up. The listing mentions a 12MP camera with autofocus, plus Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and no built-in cellular connection. One variant, SM-O200P, is also said to include transition-style lenses that darken in brighter light. With Galaxy XR already on sale, Samsung has shown it can fund and ship smart glasses at scale.
Two model numbers, one big unknown
The part that’s clear is the tracking. SM-O200P and SM-O200J exist as distinct entries, which suggests Samsung is testing more than one configuration.
The part that isn’t clear is the one you’d use to choose between them. Weight, fit, lens type beyond the transition detail, and any camera or sensor differences aren’t described, and neither are battery claims or how these sit with your phone day to day.
Until that gap closes, “two versions” is more warning label than promise.
The early spec list is taking shape
The camera is the headline spec. A 12MP sensor with autofocus reads like Samsung expects real use, not the occasional novelty snap. That also raises the obvious question, how it handles recording controls and visible signals in public, which the leak doesn’t address.
Connectivity also tells you what kind of product this is. With Wi-Fi and Bluetooth listed, and no cellular noted, the glasses sound built to lean on your phone instead of trying to be fully standalone.
The transition lens detail is the most lifestyle-coded clue. It hints at outdoor wear, not just indoor demos, but it’s only tied to the P model so far.
When you might actually see them
Timing is still loose. The leak hints at a 2026 window and suggests a starting focus on the US and South Korea, with other regions left open.
If you’re interested, the practical move is to watch for two follow-ups. First, Samsung clarifying what SM-O200P and SM-O200J actually change, especially comfort and lenses. Second, specifics on camera behavior and privacy signaling, because that will shape whether these feel wearable in everyday places. If you’re in the market now, check out the













































