Snapdragon 680 spotted in Geekbench, might be a 2+4 version of the 710

Peter, 12 June 2018

Early indications are that the Snapdragon 710 is a hit with phone makers, but Qualcomm has more chips in the works. A Snapdragon 680 was spotted in Geekbench, which will be a boon for future mid-range phones.

The CPU is listed as having six cores, which is likely a 2 + 4 configuration as we’ve seen before in the Snapdragon 650 and 808. Do keep in mind that the name may not be final – for example, the S710 was originally “670”.

Which is to say that this may be a parred down version of the 710. The clockspeed of the big cores – 2.15 GHz – matches both the Kryo 260 in the S660 and the Kryo 4xx in the 710.

However, the single core results (1,900) are higher than what the S660 scores (1,600), suggesting these are the newer 4th generation Kryo cores. Multi-core performance is slightly lower than what the S660 scores (it has a two core advantage), but that likely makes more of a difference in benchmarks than in real life use (where tasks rarely stress more than two cores at the same time).

Snapdragon 680 spotted in Geekbench: perhaps a 2+6 version of the 710

All in all this looks like a good followup to Qualcomm’s mid-range offerings. By the way, the test was done on a Qualcomm development platform with 6 GB of RAM. No phones with this chipset have been tested yet, but the 660 was first spotted in early 2017 and the first phones with it were unveiled a few months later.

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Reader comments

From the Geekbench and the 2+4 configuration, I anticipate that this SD680 will be new, next-gen "Snapdragon 625", highly successful mid-range AP for the mass market. The coming SD710 is rather expensive and overkill for truly en mass. The SD680 stri...

  • Anonymous
  • 13 Jun 2018
  • pdH

You know there also is 200 series? 50-150$ 400 is for middle range phones 200-500$ 600 upper middle range 300-600$ 700 highend 500-700$ 800 upper highend 700-1500$

Companies must ditch the 400 series and start using 625 as the low end SoC. Otherwise, okay. Average people don't mind chipsets anyway.

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