Rumor: Samsung Galaxy S22 FE will get a MediaTek Dimensity 9000 chipset

Rumor: Samsung Galaxy S22 FE will get a MediaTek Dimensity 9000 chipset

The Dimensity 9000 is MediaTek’s chipset for high-end smartphones, and can be found in the Chinese variant of the OPPO Find X5 Pro, among other things. If the rumors are true, then we will see this chipset in more phones. It would be one of the largest smartphone manufacturers, Samsung.

MediaTek chipset in a Samsung phone

The powerful MediaTek Dimensity 9000 gets a place in a new Galaxy smartphone with a 4,500 mAh battery and a price between 3000 and 4000 Chinese yuan. That reports a tipster through notebook check† This tipster indicates that the Dimensity 9000 will probably end up in the Samsung Galaxy S22 FE or the Galaxy A53 Pro. The latter does not seem plausible to us because Samsung has never released a Pro model for a Galaxy A series phone. A MediaTek chipset in the Galaxy S22 FE would also be a bold choice, as these phones always run on the same chipset as the high-end S-series.

The processor would fit better in another smartphone, such as the Galaxy A83 or the Galaxy A93. Whatever the truth may be, it is clearly too early to make any concrete statements about this. Still, we are curious whether Samsung will make the move to another chip maker such as Qualcomm or its own Exynos counterparts. The Galaxy A32 5G was already launched on the market with MediaTek’s chipset, the MediaTek Dimensity 720. Samsung is therefore already a customer registered in the MediaTek customer database.

Samsung announced the Galaxy A33 and Galaxy A53 last week, two mid-range models with 5G support. The Galaxy A73 has also been launched, but unfortunately not in the Netherlands and Belgium. These phones are equipped with Samsung’s own Exynos 1280.

What do you think of a Galaxy S22 FE or a Galaxy A smartphone with a Dimensity 9000 chipset? Let us know in the comments below this article.

Rumor: Samsung Galaxy S22 FE will get a MediaTek Dimensity 9000 chipset

– Thanks for information from Androidworld. Source

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