Samsung might be keeping its new Exynos 2600 chipset close to home. According to a fresh report, Galaxy S26 units powered by the in-house chip may launch exclusively in South Korea marking a major shift from past global releases.
Galaxy S26 with Exynos 2600 may skip global markets
A report from DigiTimes claims that only Samsung’s home market will receive 2600 variant of the Galaxy S26. That’s a stark change from previous years when Europe and parts of Asia also saw Exynos-powered phones. This time around, the decision appears tied to supply chain limitations and long-standing Qualcomm contracts.
Snapdragon still dominates the Galaxy S26 Ultra
Samsung’s documentation confirms the Galaxy S26 Ultra will use Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 across all markets. That leaves the Exynos 2600 destined for the standard Galaxy S26 and possibly the S26 Plus but only in South Korea.
Here’s why Samsung might be holding back:
- Yield issues: Reports say Samsung’s SF2 node used to build the Exynos 2600 is currently hitting around 60% yield, a barely viable rate for mass production.
- Qualcomm contracts: Existing deals may require Samsung to use Snapdragon chips in key global markets.
- Performance gaps: While early benchmarks suggest the Exynos 2600 edges out the Snapdragon in multi-core scores, it still trails slightly in single-core performance.
Exynos 2600 still has some advantages
Despite the rollout limitations, the Exynos 2600 isn’t short on potential. Built on a 2nm-class process, it could offer better efficiency and thermal performance compared to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, which uses TSMC’s 3nm N3P node.
South Korea gets the silicon experiment
By confining the Exynos 2600 to a single region, Samsung may be using its home base as a controlled test bed gauging performance and public reception before wider deployment. It’s a cautious play, but possibly a smart one, as the company works to rebuild confidence in its silicon.
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