Black Friday means that it’s time for you to pick up the Galaxy S24 Ultra
To reiterate, instead of the iPhone 17 line becoming the first phones to use a 2nm processor next September followed by the 2nm Exynos 2600 powering the Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26+ in early 2026, the Exynos 2600 might beat the A19 and A19 Pro and break the 2nm tape first. However, earlier this week the rumor mill spit out a shocker; Samsung was going to cancel the Exynos 2600 because of incredibly low yields rumored to be 10% to 20% on Samsung Foundry’s 2nm process node.
Samsung Foundry desperately needs to improve its 2nm yield which is in a range of 10%-20%. | Image credit-Samsung Foundry
This is an issue that Samsung Foundry has been battling with for years dating back to the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1. The yield is expressed as a percentage of the number of functional chips produced from a silicon wafer. The rumored 10%-20% yield for Samsung Foundry is so low that canceling the Exynos 2600 seemed like the right call to make. However, a Samsung spokesman said this week that the rumor about the Exynos 2600 being canceled was not true.
“I can confirm that the claim that Exynos 2600 production is being canceled is not true and is based on groundless rumors.”-Samsung spokesman
There has been speculation that the Exynos 2600 will use an in-house GPU instead of the usual AMD-sourced GPU. That is just speculation. The big news here is that despite talk of low yields and the rumored cancelation of the Exynos 2600 AP, it appears that Samsung does intend to produce the chipset using Samsung Foundry’s 2nm node in time to be included with the 2026 flagship line. Instead of the iPhone 17 line being the first to market with a 2nm AP, it now looks like the Galaxy S26 and Galaxy S26+ will have that distinction.