Samsung has been testing a Windows version of its browser since late 2025, and now it’s official. Samsung Browser for Windows has graduated from beta, and this time it’s bringing something new to the table. This comes in the form of an agentic AI assistant powered by Perplexity, baked directly into the browser.
The cross-device continuity side is probably the most practical feature here. It goes beyond the usual bookmark and history syncing. According to Samsung, the browser can pick up exactly where you left off on a webpage when you move from your Galaxy phone to your Windows PC, scroll position and all.
However, we should note that it requires a Samsung Account, plus either the Samsung Continuity Service or the Galaxy Connect app installed on your PC. For now, that continuity feature is limited to Galaxy Book 3, 4, 5, and 6 series devices, though Samsung says more are coming.
Integrating AI features
On the AI side, the Perplexity-powered assistant can understand what’s on the page you’re currently viewing. It can search across multiple open tabs, and even find specific moments inside videos without you scrubbing through manually. Samsung has been steadily adding AI features to its browser on Android for a while now. So, bringing that to the desktop makes sense. There’s also Samsung Pass integration for autofilling passwords and personal info across devices.
The browser runs on Windows 10 (version 1809 and above) and Windows 11, so the potential install base is pretty wide. The catch is that the agentic AI features are currently only available in the US and South Korea. Unfortunately, there is no firm timeline on when other regions will get access.
Samsung has made a few attempts at a desktop browser over the years, but this is the most fully formed version yet. Whether people actually switch from Chrome or Edge is another question entirely.