A Geekbench test for the Galaxy A37 is going viral on the internet. The numbers show some improvement, but we hesitate to call it a massive performance gain. They are swapping the chipset this time, going back to an Exynos chip. Here’s what Geekbench revealed about the Galaxy A37.
They had a Dimensity 6300 SoC for the Galaxy A36. The single-core test run on that model yielded 1001 points, and multicore points were in the neighborhood of 2972. That’s entry-level performance by today’s standards. These numbers are coming from a 2.4GHz chip and 8GB RAM, by the way.
The Geekbench listing we just found shows the title SM-A376B. That’s obviously the future A37. It brings 8 cores, as you can see in the CPU section, reaching a boost clock speed of 2.75GHz. Plus, this is a familiar architecture. The SoC here matches the Exynos 1480 that we last saw on the Galaxy A55.
The test was run on a 6GB variant of latest Samsung 5G mobile, and the platform is obviously Android 16. Let’s break down the numbers here. Even with lower RAM, it scored 1158 points on the single-core benchmark. The points are higher on multicore. It hits 3401 points.
Against the Dimensity 6300, an Exynos 1480 is a far better chip with its 4nm architecture and quad-core Cortex A78 cluster. Though it will be two years old by the time Galaxy A37 comes out. Let’s hope the software optimizations do the trick for this variant.
Samsung is already in the process of testing a firmware build for this SM-A376. Their test servers have spilled the “A376USQU0AYK3” build number for the software. This one is for the “U” model, possibly one of those carrier-locked Galaxy A37 versions in the USA. Nothing else has been revealed so far, but we have our ears to the ground. As soon as we find something new, you’ll be the first to know. Keep watching the news for updates.