2nm chip showdown: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6, Dimensity 9600 tipped to hit iPhone 18 month as Samsung foundry role debated

February 2, 2026
2nm chip showdown: Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6, Dimensity 9600 tipped to hit iPhone 18 month as Samsung foundry role debated

SEOUL, Feb 2, 2026, 17:00 (KST)

  • According to tech reports, the next flagship Android chips might debut the same month as the iPhone 18, closing a major gap Apple has held.
  • Some reports tie Samsung’s 2nm effort to a custom Qualcomm chip for the Galaxy S27 Ultra, though others doubt that change will happen this cycle.
  • As 2nm manufacturing scales up and costs climb, the race intensifies for chipmakers and foundries.

igor´sLAB revealed that flagship Android phones powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 and MediaTek’s Dimensity 9600 might hit the market the same month as Apple’s iPhone 18 lineup. This compressed schedule would set up a close showdown between the industry’s first 2-nanometre-class mobile chips — a fresh manufacturing leap promising higher speeds and lower power consumption. (igor´sLAB)

Apple has enjoyed a valuable window between unveiling the iPhone and the launch of major Android flagships: time for reviews, pre-orders, and initial sales. Narrowing that gap might push competitors to start shipping in larger quantities earlier, rather than just hinting at features.

Timing is critical for foundries—contract chipmakers that manufacture processors for other companies. Locking in early capacity at TSMC or Samsung can influence pricing and availability for next season’s leading smartphones, particularly as memory components grow scarcer.

On January 30, Wccftech reported that two Weibo insiders expect Apple’s A20 chips, Qualcomm’s next Snapdragon, and MediaTek’s upcoming Dimensity to launch together in September. According to the site, Apple will probably stick with TSMC’s N2 process, while its competitors shift to the upgraded N2P. They also flagged a potential DRAM shortage — DRAM being the main memory used in smartphones — which could still throw off release timelines. (Wccftech)

SamMobile reported on January 29 that Samsung’s chip plans might be shifting. According to a China-sourced rumor, the Galaxy S27 Ultra could ditch Samsung’s usual Exynos processor in favor of a “custom-tuned” Snapdragon. The buzz also suggests Samsung might produce this Qualcomm chip using its 2nm process, sparking renewed speculation about Samsung reclaiming high-end foundry work from TSMC. (SamMobile)

On Jan 28, Gizchina pushed back, citing a Smart Chip Insider post that Qualcomm’s Gen 6 chips are basically locked into TSMC’s N2P process and too far along to switch foundries before the 2026 launch. The source also suggested Samsung’s involvement is more likely down the line, as Qualcomm plans to “dual-source” production to spread cost and supply risks. (Gizchina)

Samsung’s foundry ambitions have been gaining momentum for weeks. On Jan 7, Reuters cited Cristiano Amon via the Korea Economic Daily, revealing Qualcomm is in talks with Samsung Electronics about contract manufacturing 2nm chips. Samsung co-CEO and chip head Jun Young-hyun stated recent supply agreements have positioned the foundry business for a significant breakthrough. (Reuters)

Apple’s iPhone 18 rollout might not follow the usual September launch schedule. According to a Jan 30 report from Reuters, which cited Nikkei Asia, Apple plans to prioritize its top-tier iPhones for release in 2026, while the standard iPhone 18 is pushed back to the first half of 2027. Sources familiar with the plan provided the details. After sharing quarterly results, Tim Cook told Reuters that demand for the newest models remains “staggering.” (Reuters)

The manufacturing leap is real. In a September 2025 announcement, MediaTek revealed it had taped out a flagship system-on-chip—integrating CPU, graphics, and more—using TSMC’s enhanced N2P 2nm process. The first chip is slated to arrive by late 2026. “MediaTek’s innovations powered by TSMC’s 2nm technology underscores our industry leadership,” said MediaTek President Joe Chen, while Kevin Zhang described N2P as “a significant step forward.” (Mediatek)

TSMC’s website states that its 2nm (N2) process entered volume production in Q4 2025, featuring first-generation nanosheet transistors—a new design aimed at boosting performance and reducing power consumption as chip nodes shrink. (Tsmc)

That September jam is still up in the air. These reports rely on whispers from Chinese social media, and chip development plans often change due to yields, costs, export restrictions, or just one missing component in the supply chain. If 2nm production hits a snag or the memory shortage worsens, the lead Apple holds could easily stretch out once more.

Upcoming clues will emerge from product launch dates and foundry order volumes, not social media chatter. If Qualcomm and MediaTek stick to a September schedule—and if Samsung manages to secure some 2nm production—the battle for the iPhone 18 season could kick off sooner and get more complicated.

Why Chinese Flagships Are Ditching Snapdragon for Dimensity 9600

Technology News

  • Apple stops signing iOS 26.2, blocking downgrade to older builds
    February 3, 2026, 4:14 AM EST. Apple has stopped signing iOS 26.2, blocking downgrades after the release of iOS 26.2.1. The change, spotted by MacRumors, means users on 26.2.1 cannot revert to 26.2 or any earlier build. The company's latest release notes for 26.2.1 mention AirTag (2nd generation) support and bug fixes, with no public CVEs listed. In addition, Apple has stopped signing several earlier iOS versions following newer rollouts: iOS 12.5.7, iOS 15.8.5, iOS 16.7.12 and iOS 18.7.3, after updates 12.5.8, 15.8.6, 16.7.14 and 18.7.4 were released. The policy is typical when security fixes or stability are deemed ready. Downgrading becomes impractical for most users, as security gaps from older versions remain unpatchable on signed devices.