Qualcomm unveiled the Snapdragon 8 Elite — a new high-end mobile chip that piqued the interest of our own Linux kernel crew to the extent they had already prepped patches for it days later. While future updates will be implemented to further enhance the GPU performance, these initial patches give us an insight into what games could run through emulation on this Snapdragon 8 Elite.
This emulation method would be used to provide some level of compatibility with PC titles at least until developers could develop games for the new platform natively. A process that can obviously take a very long time.
More About the Snapdragon 8 Elite Linux Support
According to a post shared by @Richard_Milier on X, Qualcomm’s Senior Director of Engineering showed that the upcoming Snapdragon 8 Elite will be designed for PC game reproduction without worry in terms of performance.
However, this approach will mean some sacrifices in performance as well — especially with the relatively modest selection of recent flagship games on Android. Getting developers to invest in porting PC games down to Snapdragon is a huge challenge and costs too much. Emulation, for the time being, is a practical way to enjoy new games from this generation when playing them natively isn’t yet plausible.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite appears to be even more powerful on benchmarks. In the 3DMark Steel Nomad Light benchmark, it outperformed AMD’s Radeon 780M, which powers the ASUS ROG Ally—a portable gaming console that handles AAA games. It just goes to show how the Snapdragon 8 Elite is well capable of running graphically demanding games, you may have to turn down some graphical settings.
From the X discussion around this benchmark, they also talk about how at one point in time there was speculation of an APU like that possibly being able to support a Linux-based UI complete with touch and pen functionality allowing translation of professional PC applications/mobile device tackling part of what has only been delivered on some high-end iPad models. Despite these promising hardware advancements, Qualcomm still faces software development hurdles.
While the Snapdragon 8 Elite showcases powerful specifications, substantial progress is needed on the software front. With more updates and developer interest, Qualcomm’s platform could eventually offer a compelling solution for AAA gaming and professional applications in a mobile context.
FAQs
Can the Snapdragon 8 Elite run PC games natively?
Not yet—PC games will initially run through emulation, with native support requiring more development time.
Will GPU patches improve gaming performance?
Yes, upcoming GPU-focused patches are expected to optimize the Snapdragon 8 Elite for smoother, more efficient gameplay.