
A new leak says Samsung is internally developing an MH1 holographic 3D display, also referred to in some chatter as H1, and that Apple could be the first company to ship the technology in a future Spatial iPhone. The claim comes from tipster @phonefuturist, who posted the rumor on X on May 6.
According to the leak, the main idea behind the panel is a built-in nanostructured holographic layer. Compared with a more conventional 3D screen approach, this design is said to work together with eye tracking so the phone can direct light more precisely and create spatial AI visuals that appear to float above the glass with visible depth. If that description holds up, users would be able to view the 3D effect without wearing any extra hardware.

The report also says Samsung has developed a patented interaction algorithm for the concept. In practice, that would let a user tilt the phone and look at an object in a video from different angles, making the effect feel more like true spatial viewing than a flat animation trick.
One notable detail in the rumor is that the screen is said to keep full 4K clarity during normal use, only switching into its depth-focused mode when holographic content is actually being played. That would matter a lot if Samsung wants the panel to feel practical in day-to-day smartphone use rather than like a demo feature that compromises the rest of the display.
For now, the project is still described as being in an early development stage, and there is no firm production timeline attached to it. Even so, if the leak is accurate, the MH1 holographic 3D display could point to a broader shift in mobile screens, moving beyond standard 2D panels toward more immersive spatial interfaces, with the rumored Spatial iPhone positioned as the first major showcase.