- Samsung's upcoming Exynos 2700 SoC just showed up on Geekbench listing with a deca-core configuration.
- Albeit the scores are not that impressive, it is safe to assume that Samsung is still making refinements to the chipset before it readies to squash its competitors.
- The Exynos 2700 SoC is fabbed on a refined 2nm process and will power the Galaxy S27 Series rolling out early next year.
The Exynos 2700 Geekbench results are now out, giving us our first real glimpse at Samsung’s upcoming mobile platform. While the listing reveals some interesting details about the chip, the early performance numbers don’t exactly stand out.
That said, it’s still early days, and these scores rarely tell the full story.
Early Geekbench scores don’t impress (yet)
According to the Geekbench database, the Exynos 2700 SoC scores 2,603 points on the single-core and 10,350 points on the multi-core benchmark. To be honest, these are not impressive scores; however, given the fact that the chipset is still in its early testing phase, the performance can be muted and will be refined in future iterations.

Furthermore, the phone it was tested on runs on Android v16 bearing 12GB RAM and the almighty Exynos 2700 SoC, reaching the points mentioned above. For comparison, the Geekbench 6 listing for the Exynos 2600 SoC reveals scores of 3,455 and 11,621 points on the single-core and multi-core tests, respectively.
Coming back to the Exynos 2700 SoC, the core configurations are as follows: 1x prime core clocked at 2.78GHz, 4x performance cores at 2.88GHz, 1x low-power core at 2.30GHz, and finally, we have 4x efficiency cores at 2.40GHz. This makes the Exynos 2700 SoC the one with a deca-core configuration. This is a slight variation from the Exynos 2600’s 1+3+6 core configuration; perhaps it will affect its performance in real-world tests.
The listing also mentions the Xclipse 970 GPU powering the latest-gen chipset. In fact, the CPU on-board is expected to be completely developed in-house, and that could be a major feat. It is safe to assume that the chipset is still in its early stages and will be heavily optimized with future iterations to bring its actual performance into play. On the other hand, the OpenCL score on the Exynos 2700 is 15,618 points.
The Exynos 2700 SoC will be based on a refined 2nm SF2P+ process that can potentially bring a 25% reduction in power consumption and a 12% increase in performance, typically.
Exynos 2700 SoC likely to power the Galaxy S27 series
Every year, we see the latest line-up of Galaxy S-series devices paired with Exynos chipsets. This year, we had the Galaxy S26 series with the Exynos 2600 SoC. Similarly, we will see the Exynos 2700 SoC powering both the Galaxy S27 and S27 Plus across regions. The top-of-the-line Galaxy S27 Ultra will see the Exynos 2700 SoC and/or the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 SoC based on regions.
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