Galaxy Wearable app has been a quiet pain for Galaxy Watch owners for a long time. However beautiful that watch is, its managing app stays equally bland, a long list of settings on a black screen, where finding anything useful means digging through menus. Those days appear set to change. A fresh leak says after Samsung Health, this Wearable app is now receiving its biggest redesign in history. SammyGuru brought this news first through its exclusive report, plus since this remains a leak, not words from Samsung's mouth, keeping that in mind while reading is wise.

Its visual change catches eyes first. Replacing that familiar plain black screen come soft blue-purple gradients, floating cards, plus a clean layout matching One UI's new design. Whole app splits into three simple sections: Watch faces, Home, plus Settings. Meaning no more getting lost hunting for where things live.

Galaxy Wearable app

Its Home tab turns most useful of all. Opening this app no longer drops you straight into a settings jungle, instead you see a large image of your watch, how much battery remains, plus an estimate of how long it lasts. Right at top sit shortcuts for exactly those things people truly change again plus again: notifications, quick settings, Tiles, plus apps. Watch face browsing changes too. Earlier you guessed from flat previews, now each face appears applied on a full watch, so before buying or downloading you understand how it truly looks on your own wrist. Settings dressed up in simple monochrome icons too, with useful things like Find My Watch moving right to top.

But this leak's real thrill lives not in design, rather in hidden new features. Most curiosity-raising thing carries a name, AI-generated Tiles. No more picking widgets by hand, just tell Galaxy AI, it builds a Tile with information you like. Imagine, one single Tile holding today's weather, your favorite team's live score, fresh news, plus your day's step count, all together.

Talking with Gemini becomes more natural too. Days of pressing buttons may end, raising your wrist makes that watch start listening on its own. While walking, just look at your watch, simply say, "will it rain this evening?" or "set a 15 minute timer."

Health's side isn't returning empty-handed either. Coming is Daily Cardio Load, which looks at your past workouts plus fitness history, then tells how much effort today deserves, so nothing goes overboard. Another feature named Vitals measures changes in heart rate, breathing rate, plus skin temperature through overnight sleep, so meaningful shifts get caught over time. Sound Exposure keeps count of how much loud noise surrounds you all day, warning before ears take damage.

Some separate gifts appeared for Ultra watches too: trail-running tools with elevation tracking, saving waypoints while climbing so routes can be retraced, plus diving features launching by themselves at preset depths. Whether these stay limited to Ultra, Samsung hasn't confirmed yet.

That leaked build still carries placeholder images plus traces of older software, meaning work continues, final touches remain. Yet its picture stays clear: Samsung wants this Wearable app to become an intelligent dashboard instead of merely a place for changing settings. If all this truly arrives with One UI 9 Watch, menu-digging days for Galaxy Watch owners shorten considerably.

Source and image credit: sammyguru