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Samsung’s Exynos 2600 targets Galaxy S26 comeback with 6x faster AI
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Samsung is preparing to bring Exynos processors back to the Galaxy S flagship series with the Exynos 2600 chip expected in the Galaxy S26 lineup next year. The move marks a potential comeback for Samsung’s custom silicon after the troubled Exynos 2500 suffered production delays and lackluster performance, forcing Samsung to rely exclusively on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite for the entire Galaxy S25 series.

What you should know: The Exynos 2600 will leverage Samsung’s cutting-edge 2nm Gate-All-Around manufacturing process, potentially giving it power efficiency advantages over Qualcomm’s next-generation chip built on TSMC’s 3nm technology.

  • Samsung has confirmed the chip will feature “next-gen AI” capabilities, with rumors suggesting the NPU (neural processing unit, the chip’s AI brain) could be up to six times faster than Apple’s A19 Pro and 30% faster than Qualcomm’s latest offering for AI workloads.
  • Early reports indicate Samsung’s 2nm yield rates remain challenging, varying between 30% and 50%, which could impact cost advantages over using Qualcomm chips exclusively.

The strategic positioning: Samsung appears to be taking a tiered approach with the Galaxy S26 series, potentially reserving Snapdragon for premium models while using Exynos for more affordable variants.

  • Rumors suggest the Galaxy S26 Ultra and possibly the Plus model will feature Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 globally, while the baseline Galaxy S26 could be the primary Exynos 2600 device.
  • This strategy mirrors Samsung’s recent foldable releases, where the Galaxy Z Flip 7 uses Exynos while the Z Fold 7 features Snapdragon.

Performance expectations: While benchmark leaks suggest competitive performance, the Exynos 2600 faces significant challenges in matching Qualcomm’s Oryon CPU cores.

  • Current mobile CPU options like Arm’s C1-Ultra lag behind Qualcomm’s reference performance by 12-25% in various workloads.
  • The rumored Xclipse 960 GPU could potentially surpass last year’s Snapdragon 8 Elite and Apple’s A19 Pro in graphics performance, representing a major improvement over previous Exynos graphics capabilities.

Why this matters: Success for the Exynos 2600 depends less on beating Snapdragon in raw performance and more on avoiding the reliability issues that have plagued previous generations.

  • Past Exynos processors suffered from supply constraints, overheating, throttling, battery drain, and connectivity problems, creating a perception that Snapdragon variants were superior.
  • A competitive Exynos 2600 at an aggressive $799 price point could help Samsung reduce dependency on Qualcomm while maintaining profit margins on flagship devices.

What they’re saying: Samsung itself has claimed that its next smartphones will offer “stronger performance,” though the company has yet to reveal the Exynos 2600’s full specifications.

The big picture: The Exynos 2600 represents Samsung’s attempt to reset its position as both a manufacturing leader and mobile AI innovator, leveraging its advanced 2nm process technology to compete with established players like Qualcomm and Apple in the premium smartphone market.

Can the Galaxy S26's custom chip finally make Exynos great again?

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