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You might get an OpenAI ear wearable, and it’s not just earbuds

The leak describes a behind-the-ear design with removable pieces and a metal "eggstone" body, hinting at a different kind of audio hardware aimed at everyday listening.

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IN ear daily use of the airpods pro 3 in cafe
Digital Trends

An OpenAI ear wearable rumor just got a lot more concrete, at least on paper. Smart Pikachu, a supply chain-focused leaker, claims OpenAI has a portable audio product in development that’s meant to live on your ear, not in your pocket.

The same posts attach the codename Sweetpea to the project and describe a behind-the-ear setup where most of the hardware sits out of sight. Smaller parts are said to detach, which reads less like standard earbuds and more like a wearable you keep on for longer stretches.

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OpenAI hasn’t confirmed the hardware, and the basics that matter most are still absent. There’s no price, no final name, and no clear plan for where it launches first.

The design clues are the hook

What makes this rumor stick is the physical description. A behind-the-ear fit can solve problems that plague tiny buds, like stability during movement, microphone placement, and comfort when you wear it for hours.

One shared image looks like a component layout and includes labels that suggest skin contact and signal pickup, plus an ultrasonic transmitter. If that image is authentic, the OpenAI ear wearable may do more than play audio. It could be designed to listen and sense, even in small ways, which would help explain why the form factor isn’t just another AirPods clone.

A supplier shift signals ambition

Smart Pikachu also claims the project shifted manufacturing plans from Luxshare to Foxconn, with Vietnam mentioned as the preferred production base and a push to avoid China for this build.

Those kinds of supplier conversations usually show up when a product is being planned at real scale. It doesn’t prove the device is coming, but it suggests the effort is being treated like a consumer launch, not a lab experiment.

What to watch next

If the timeline floated in the posts is close, the next tells should be practical. Better images, clearer fit details, and regulatory filings would help confirm how this wearable handles mics, wind noise, and day-to-day comfort.

There’s also a claim about powerful silicon and a mix of standard and custom chips. That will decide whether Sweetpea is basically a phone companion, or a more capable headset that can handle more processing on its own. The moment another credible source backs the behind-the-ear design, this shifts from rumor watching to shopping-season forecasting.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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