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World of Software > Gadget > Exclusive: New Snapdragon wearables chip in the works, could supercharge Wear OS watch performance
Gadget

Exclusive: New Snapdragon wearables chip in the works, could supercharge Wear OS watch performance

News Room
Last updated: 2025/07/14 at 6:23 AM
News Room Published 14 July 2025
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TL;DR

  • Qualcomm is working on a new wearable chip, the “SW6100”, also called “aspena”
  • The processor is not based on any previous Qualcomm product, unlike its previous wearable chips
  • The specs include 1x Arm Cortex-A78 + 4x Arm Cortex-A55, an LPDDR5X RAM controller, all built on a TSMC process node

Wear OS smartwatches have been in a bit of a standstill lately. After releasing Snapdragon W5/+ Gen 1 in 2022, Qualcomm hasn’t given the platform any attention, with only Samsung continuing to develop new chips for wearables. Google smartwatches, for example, have been stuck on the same Qualcomm platform for three years now. There was some talk about possible RISC-V-based SoCs as well as next-generation chips for a while now, but without any concrete details.

That is, until now. has viewed credible evidence that Qualcomm is working on a new wearables platform and some of its specs. If it does see the light of day, it could give the next generation of Wear OS wearables a much-needed performance jump.

You’re reading an Authority Insights story. Discover Authority Insights for more exclusive reports, app teardowns, leaks, and in-depth tech coverage you won’t find anywhere else. These reports reflect developments at the time of writing. Some features or details uncovered in leaks may change before official release.


Kamila Wojciechowska /

Qualcomm Snapdragon Wear 4100 reference design from my collection

Historically, Qualcomm’s wear chips haven’t received the same attention to detail as its smartphone models. They are often existing smartphone chips with minor modifications, and some are also built on a newer process node. In fact, some of the earlier reference designs Qualcomm provides to OEMs use unmodified smartphone chips! Of course, some work still goes into them (like optimizing sensor hubs and wireless), but a fully bespoke design has never been a priority for Qualcomm. The only fully custom part of the platform was the external coprocessor chips, but even those were built in the cheapest way possible, utilizing a lot of off-the-shelf IP.

I compiled a table of Qualcomm’s past wearable chips, as well as the smartphone chips I assume they are based on:

Wearable chip Based on

Wear 2100 | Wear 2500 | Wear 3100
MSM8909w
4x Arm Cortex-A7 @ up to 1.2 GHz
Adreno 304 GPU
Released 2016 (Wear 2100)
28 nm-class TSMC process (28LP)
Optional QCC1110 coprocessor (Wear 3100 only)

Snapdragon 210
MSM8909
4x Arm Cortex-A7 @ up to 1.1 GHz
Adreno 304 GPU
Released 2014
28 nm-class TSMC process (28LP)

Wear 4100
SDM429w
4x Arm Cortex-A53 @ up to 2.0 GHz
Adreno 504 GPU
Released 2020
12 nm-class TSMC process (12FFC)
Optional QCC4100 coprocessor

Snapdragon 429
SDM429
4x Arm Cortex-A53 @ up to 2.0 GHz
Adreno 504 GPU
Released 2018
12 nm-class TSMC process (12FFC)

W5 Gen 1 | W5+ Gen 1
SW5100
4x Arm Cortex-A53 @ up to 1.7 GHz
Adreno 702 GPU
Released 2022
4 nm-class Samsung process
Optional QCC5100 coprocessor (W5+ Gen 1 only)

QCS2290 (IoT chip)
QCS2290
4x Arm Cortex-A53 @ up to 2.0 GHz
Adreno 702 GPU
Released 2021
11 nm-class process (dual-sourced from Global Foundries and Samsung)

It looks like Qualcomm might start taking the category more seriously now, though. Based on the information we viewed, a new chip called SW6100, codenamed Aspen, is currently in the testing phase at Qualcomm. We don’t know what the new chip will be called, but my guess is that it will either be W5 Gen 2 or W6 Gen 1.

We also learned quite a bit about it — first, it’s based on a TSMC process node. Unfortunately, we don’t know which specific one it is. Whatever the case, it should improve the platform’s efficiency, as Samsung process nodes are currently behind in that area. Additionally, the RAM controller was upgraded to support LPDDR5X (whereas W5 Gen 1 only supported LPDDR4), which should give a small but non-negligible battery life boost. There’s also the QCC6100 coprocessor, which we unfortunately don’t know anything about just yet.

Qualcomm could finally give its wearable platform the performance boost it desperately needs.

We also found out the CPU core configuration — 1x Arm Cortex-A78 + 4x Arm Cortex-A55. This would represent a huge upgrade over the previous generation. Going from Cortex-A53 cores (first introduced in 2012, by the way) to a much newer Cortex-A55 cluster with an additional big core like Cortex-A78 should improve performance. Surprisingly, Qualcomm isn’t the only one putting that config into a wearable chip, as the Samsung Exynos W1000 uses the exact same one.

Of course, these cores are still dated, and it would be nice to see something newer in a watch someday, but they’re still a huge improvement over the previous generations. Hopefully, it was a calculated decision to provide better efficiency instead of extra performance that’s probably not needed in a watch anyway.

A Qualcomm illustrative image depicts an expanded smartwatch implementing the W5 platform.

What’s interesting is that Qualcomm was working with Google to bring RISC-V wear chips to the market. This leak suggests that’s not happening anytime soon, if ever. The Cortex-A78 core in SW6100 is also surprising — there are almost no licensable RISC-V cores that are that powerful, so it will be intriguing to see how Qualcomm handles that.

We don’t know when the new chip will be released, but if it does reach production, we could see it in Wear OS smartwatches in 2026.

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