What’s happened? Samsung looks ready to lean on its own silicon for the smallest Galaxy S26. Evidence spotted by SamMobile indicates the Galaxy S26 Pro will ship with the Exynos 2600 in most regions, continuing the company’s split-chip strategy for flagships after the surprising decision to go Qualcomm-only for the worldwide launch of its S25 models.
- SamMobile says it has evidence that S26 Pro uses Exynos 2600 as the primary chipset, although it hasn’t provided proof.
- The broader S26 lineup, expected in February 2026, includes the S26 Pro, S26 Edge, and S26 Ultra.
- Regional split returns: Exynos in most markets, with Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 likely in the US and China – a move back the old model, corroborating claims the use of Qualcomm was due to poor yields of Samsung’s own Eyxnos chipset.
- A late addition, the rumored S26+, has entered development and should mirror the same chip map.
This is important because: Silicon choices set the tone for performance, battery life, and even resale value. If Exynos is the default for S26 Pro, it signals real confidence in Samsung’s 2nm roadmap and hints at what the rest of the lineup might do.
- Exynos-first can tighten hardware and software integration, often improving efficiency and feature timing.
- The reported 2nm process, ten-core CPU, and Xclipse 950 GPU on AMD’s RDNA tech point to bigger gains in graphics and multitasking.
- Regional splits affect buying plans as some shoppers prefer Qualcomm, so knowing where Snapdragon lands matters.
- Early chatter is upbeat, but final results will hinge on thermals, sustained clocks, and optimization. Essentially, performance is the key thing here – despite the Exynos reportedly costing less for Samsung to use than Qualcomm’s chip.
Why should I care? Because the chip you get changes the phone you live with. If you plan on grabbig the smallest Galaxy flagship next year, chances are you’ll end up with Samsung’s own silicon, not Qualcomm’s.
- Outside the US and China, S26 Pro is expected to ship with Exynos 2600 by default.
- On paper, 2nm, a ten-core CPU using ARM C1 cores, and an Xclipse 950 GPU suggest strong gains for games and multitasking.
- Some leaks claim it outpaces Snapdragon 8 Elite, though real-world tuning will tell the story.
Okay, so what’s next? With a February 2026 window on the board, the next few months should bring clearer details on where Exynos ships and how it performs, from camera features to on-device AI. Leaks have been teasing buyers, earning praise and sometimes disappointment from some.
- Reports say mass production began in September, so pre-release benchmarks could surface soon.