The best smartphones haven’t really changed much over the years. A faster screen here, a bigger camera bump there – the big upgrades are incremental, rather than mind-blowing. But new speculation surrounding an OpenAI phone might shake things up a bit.

The latest reports stem from analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, who says that OpenAI is reportedly working with Qualcomm and MediaTek on a smartphone chipset, with manufacturing partner Luxshare also involved. In other words, this isn’t a confirmed OpenAI phone project. But it’s still early-stage work that could, in theory, evolve into one eventually.

Both Qualcomm and MediaTek have been pushing the idea of agentic AI – assistants that don’t just respond to commands, but actually carry out tasks across services. This kind of approach could sit at the centre of OpenAI’s ambitions.

If an OpenAI phone does end up launching, the big shift would be how you interact with it. Rather than jumping between apps, you might rely on an AI agent to handle things in the background – messaging people, booking services, pulling information together – all from a single prompt.

While everything here is speculative at best, we do have a vague timeline for the underlying work. Kuo says that specifications and supplier details for the chipset could be finalised by late 2026 or early 2027, with mass production pencilled in for 2028. That alone suggests anything consumer-facing is still a long way off.

Elsewhere, OpenAI has also been linked to a range of other hardware ideas, including earbuds and other AI-first devices, as well as a high-profile collaboration with former Apple designer Jony Ive. Whether any of that feeds into a future phone though, is up in the air.

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