Smartphones in the Samsung Galaxy M series are often just slightly modified versions of their Galaxy A counterparts. The Galaxy M67 5G appears to be an exception. The Galaxy M67 5G was spotted on Geekbench, specifically with a Samsung Exynos 2200. This is a flagship processor from 2022 that has already been used in the Galaxy S22 and the Galaxy S23 FE.
The 4-nm ARM chip features an ARM Cortex-X2 prime core with boost clock speeds of up to 2.8 GHz, three Cortex-A710 performance cores running at 2.52 GHz, and four Cortex-A510 efficiency cores running at 1.82 GHz. In addition, there is a Samsung Xclipse 920 iGPU based on the AMD RDNA 2 architecture with hardware-accelerated ray tracing. With this chip, the Galaxy M67 5G achieves a single-thread score of 1,589 points and a multi-core score of 3,923 points on Geekbench 6.
Compared to the more modern Samsung Exynos 1680 found in the Galaxy A57 ($449 on Amazon), the Galaxy M67 thus achieves 21.2 percent higher single-core performance but 10.2 percent lower multi-core performance. Samsung is pairing the chip with 8 GB of RAM, at least in one variant of the Galaxy M67 5G. The mid-range smartphone will apparently launch with Android 17. No further details are known yet regarding the specifications, launch date, or price of the Galaxy M67 5G, but since the smartphone has already been tested on Geekbench, it should only be a matter of weeks until its launch.











