Samsung just fired a shot at Qualcomm. The new Exynos 2600 is official and it’s the world’s first 2nm mobile chip. Designed to debut in the upcoming Galaxy S26, the chip takes direct aim at every weak spot of its predecessor.
Exynos 2600 puts focus on thermal and efficiency gains
Samsung made it clear: this chip is about more than raw speed. Efficiency, heat management, and AI improvements top the list. Built on Samsung’s 2nm Gate-All-Around (GAA) process, the Exynos 2600 is expected to deliver up to 39% better performance than the Exynos 2500.
A new Heat Path Block (HPB) sits directly atop the chip, acting like a mini heat sink to disperse thermal buildup. Combined with architectural changes, it could solve the overheating issues that plagued older Exynos chips.
Galaxy S26 may mark return of regional chip divide
After skipping Exynos in the Galaxy S23 and S25, Samsung could be preparing to reintroduce its dual-chip strategy. While the Exynos 2600 is confirmed for the Galaxy S26, it’s unclear whether it will appear globally or remain limited to South Korea.
Still, this time around, the Exynos variant might actually be the more powerful one. Qualcomm’s rival Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, built on TSMC’s 3nm node, trails behind Samsung’s 2nm process at least on paper.
Exynos 2600 goes all-in on AI and camera smarts
This chip isn’t just faster, it’s smarter. Samsung’s new 32K MAC NPU promises a 113% jump in generative AI performance. It powers features like:
- AI-based scene detection via a Visual Perception System (VPS)
- Real-time blink detection during selfies
- Power-saving image processing with 50% less energy use
- AVP codec for high-end video capture, positioned as an alternative to ProRes
Cameras up to 320 MP are supported, though we’ll have to see how OEMs push that limit.
10-core setup aims to win back mobile gamers
The Exynos 2600’s architecture brings ten ARM Lumex-based CPU cores into the mix. That includes one 3.8 GHz Ultra Prime core and six 2.75 GHz efficiency cores, balancing firepower and battery life. Meanwhile, the new Xclipse 960 GPU delivers double the graphics power of the previous gen and a 50% jump in ray tracing.
Gamers may also appreciate Exynos Neural Super Sampling (ENSS), Samsung’s AI-driven tech for upscaling and frame generation, similar to NVIDIA’s DLSS for mobile.
2nm leap may finally rewrite the Exynos narrative
For years, Exynos chips felt like a compromise. With the 2600, Samsung looks ready to flip that script. If the Galaxy S26 pairs this silicon with strong software optimization, 2026 might be the year people stop asking for the Snapdragon variant.

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