Samsung Electronics has officially launched Samsung Browser for Windows PCs, marking a major expansion of its popular mobile browser beyond smartphones and tablets. Previously known as Samsung Internet, the desktop version has now graduated from beta and introduces powerful Galaxy AI features, including an agentic AI assistant powered by Perplexity. This isn’t just another Chromium-based browser—it’s built for seamless integration with the Samsung Galaxy ecosystem while delivering smart, context-aware AI that goes far beyond basic chatbots.
Seamless Cross-Device Experience
One of the standout aspects of Samsung Browser for Windows is its deep continuity with Samsung devices. By signing in with a Samsung account, users can securely sync bookmarks, browsing history, open tabs, and passwords across their Galaxy phone, tablet, and Windows PC via Samsung Cloud and Samsung Pass.
This means you can start reading an article or planning a trip on your Galaxy smartphone and instantly pick up exactly where you left off on your desktop—no manual syncing or extra steps required. The browser even prompts you to resume sessions when switching devices, creating a fluid, ecosystem-wide browsing flow that feels especially natural for Galaxy Book users but works on any compatible Windows machine.
The “Insane” Part: Agentic Galaxy AI Powered by Perplexity
What truly sets this browser apart is its new AI assistant, developed in partnership with Perplexity. Unlike traditional AI tools that require copy-pasting content into a separate window, this agentic AI understands the context of the current webpage, your open tabs, and even your browsing history.
Users can interact with it using natural language commands to:
- Generate summaries of single pages or compare information across multiple tabs.
- Create practical outputs like multi-day travel itineraries based on content from open tabs.
- Search your own browsing history conversationally (for example, “find that smartwatch review I read last week”).
- Jump to specific moments in videos by grasping the page context.
- Perform on-device translation of entire webpages for enhanced privacy and speed.
These capabilities turn the browser into an active helper that doesn’t just answer questions—it takes action based on what you’re actually doing online. The AI features are currently rolling out first in South Korea and the United States, with more regions expected soon.
Additional Features and Privacy Focus
Beyond AI, Samsung Browser brings over many strengths from its mobile version:
- Smart anti-tracking and a Privacy Dashboard that shows blocked trackers.
- Secret Mode for private browsing.
- Improved tab management and a side panel for quick access to information.
- Fast autofill powered by Samsung Pass.
The browser supports Windows 10 (version 1809 and newer) as well as Windows 11.
Who Should Try It?
Samsung Browser shines brightest for users already invested in the Galaxy ecosystem—those with a Galaxy phone, watch, or Galaxy Book laptop. The combination of effortless device handoff and context-aware AI creates a more integrated experience than what generic browsers like Chrome or Edge typically offer.
Reviewers and early users praise the agentic AI for feeling genuinely useful and “action-oriented,” helping reduce friction in everyday tasks. However, as a relatively new desktop entrant, it may not yet match the extension ecosystem or site compatibility of more established browsers. Some advanced AI functions also depend on region and Samsung account login.
If you’re deep in Samsung’s world, this browser could become your daily driver. Even for others, the cross-device sync and innovative AI make it worth a test run.
How to Get Started
Head over to the official site at browser.samsung.com to download Samsung Browser for Windows. The full launch removes earlier regional and beta restrictions, making it accessible to more users globally.
Samsung is clearly positioning its browser as more than just a web viewer—it’s evolving into an intelligent, ambient AI platform across devices. With Perplexity’s strengths now baked in, the Windows version feels like a bold step in the increasingly competitive AI browser space.
Have you tried the new Samsung Browser yet, or are you sticking with your current setup? The combination of Galaxy continuity and agentic AI might just change how you browse on PC.