There have been a lot of rumors around the Galaxy S26 series’ performance, specifically about if it will continue to use chipsets from Qualcomm across all markets. However, Samsung unveiled its in-house Exynos 2600 chip in a new video and now, I’m not sure it needs Qualcomm anymore.

First and foremost, the Exynos 2600 is stated to be the world’s first smartphone SoC built on a 2nm Gate-All-Around (GAA) manufacturing process. According to Samsung, this new design will massively improve performance, efficiency and thermal behavior due to how the GAA process works.

Exynos 2600: Official Introduction | Samsung – YouTube
Exynos 2600: Official Introduction | Samsung - YouTube

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Of course, a chip is only as powerful as its cores, and the Exynos 2600 has an impressive setup. Samsung has used a 10-core CPU that focuses on big and mid-sized performance cores, The advantage to using these sizes is that they allow for strong, sustained performance and maximum power efficiency. This should, according to Samsung, allow for a 39% increase in CPU performance compared to the Exynos 2500. Something that leaked benchmarks for the 2600 seem to back up.

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Exynos 2600

(Image credit: Samsung)

If you’re a gamer, then the Exynos 2600 has a lot to offer thanks to the Xclipse 960 GPU. Samsung states that it offers twice the computing performance and a 50% increase in ray tracing. The Exynos 2600 also marks the debut of Samsung’s Exynos Neural Sampling (ENSS) technology, which uses AI-based upscaling and frame generation to offer smoother gameplay without massively affecting the battery life.

Android Authority, the Exynos 2600 appears to rely on a separate modem and connectivity chip. In comparison, the majority of Qualcomm’s chips — including the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 — have these built in. This could impact the power efficiency and heat management of the device as a whole.

Samsung has yet to confirm which markets will see Galaxy S26 series phones with an Exynos chip. However, reports indicate that Samsung started mass production of the chips in November, and rising prices could push more devices to feature the chip than originally expected. For now, all we can do is wait and see what Samsung unveils at the next Galaxy Unpacked, which is rumored to be occurring in late February.

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