Samsung's 2nm Exynos 2600 chipset is ready for mass production
Samsung's Exynos 2600 chipset will be the world's first mobile SoC made using a 2nm process, that much the company has already confirmed. We've seen it improving its scores in Geekbench a few days ago, and now a new report from Samsung's home of Korea claims the chip is ready for mass production.
The holdup seems to be Samsung deciding whether or not to use it in some or all members of the upcoming Galaxy S26 family. This decision will reportedly only be made in the fourth quarter of this year, so between October to December.
We've already heard a few times that the Exynos 2600 will signify the return of Exynos into Samsung's flagship slab-style smartphone line. If the company does decide to go this route, it will be a major win for the in-house SoC line, following the disappointing Exynos 2500.
Industry sources say it's highly likely that the Exynos 2600 will be used in at least some Galaxy S26 devices in some places, especially as the addition of a new "heat pass block" is expected to solve the existing heat generation issues in the chip, as this component acts like a heat sink.
Source (in Korean)
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Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 20 Sep 2025
- 7Xn
You have no idea do you? Intel sucks, that's why they too turned to TSMC. Microarchitecture aside, AMD switching to TSMC is a major reason why they overtook Intel. This ain't the year 2000, clock speed is no longer the metric.
- LOL
- 13 Sep 2025
- vjv
There's something I do not understand. If Exynos chips are that good or at least competitive and value for money, why don't non-Samsung Android phones use them? Why do they almost always use Qualcomm Snapdragon? Even the newer Mediatek...
- LOL
- 13 Sep 2025
- vjv
Doesn't matter which foundry or brand, 2nm is always better than 3nm. Battery life, temperatures, efficiency.




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