There have been no specific details on Samsung’s Exynos 2300 leaks as of less than two months before 2022 ends. One tipper thinks the chipset could not launch because there isn’t much information available on it.
Ice Universe on Twitter hasn’t explicitly stated in his message that the Exynos 2300 won’t be launched, but he does have a sane point to make. The only inference that can be drawn from the lack of publication of the CPU cluster information for Samsung’s flagship SoC at this point is that the company has given up on its 2023 debut.
Although Samsung’s chipset division has stated that it is committed to creating future Exynos SoCs, it appears that there are internal conflicts between senior management and engineers that prohibit Samsung from consistently producing the finest smartphone chipset. It is improbable that we will see the results of Samsung’s labor until 2025, despite discussions of the construction of a distinctive SoC and a joint task force that would oversee this operation to boost productivity among departments.
When Qualcomm revealed that Samsung would only employ the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for its upcoming flagship lineup, which is the Galaxy S23, it provided additional proof that the company would not release an Exynos 2300 in 2023.
Due to performance and energy efficiency discrepancies within the same Galaxy S23 model—Samsung would most certainly mass produce the Exynos 2300 on its 4nm node, whereas the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 would stick with the more advanced TSMC 4nm process—customers would be dissatisfied.
Even on the Twitter thread, commentators seem to be happy that the Exynos 2300 won’t be released, which is understandable given how previous Samsung chipsets have performed. The company needs to straighten up and take the smartphone chipset business more seriously if it doesn’t want to lose market share to rivals like Qualcomm and MediaTek.
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