Galaxy A57 was seen once on Geekbench with an OpenCL benchmark. It has appeared on the same platform again, but this time, we are witnessing its single and multicore performance here. The scoresheet was spotted recently and reported by an X leaker.
The model number you see up top clearly signals that it’s a Galaxy A57. The device SM-A576B, according to the listing, seems to use the Android 16 system and a 2.91 GHz SoC. There was no label on this benchmark for Galaxy A57’s chipset, but hearsay suggests it’s an Exynos 1680.
The leaker also puts the chipset name in the description of his X post. We didn’t know specifics about the Exynos 1680 before, apart from the GPU that showed up in the OpenCL benchmark. Geekbench now shows three core clusters for this SoC, dividing an 8-core setup.

Three of them are E cores at 1.95GHz. We have another four-core cluster here with a 2.6 GHz clock speed on the Samsung latest 5G mobile. There’s just one P-core with a 2.91 GHz speed. This could just be an early prototype, but the results showed poor single and multicore performance.
Exynos 1680 topped out at 1311 points on the single-core test. It could only hit a 4347 average in the multicore test run. Sure, these results are better than last time on Galaxy A56, but these scores barely place the phone in the mid-range category. Samsung definitely needs to improve in that area.

The Galaxy A57 variant used for this test has 12GB RAM. There’s probably a lower RAM option as well, as a previous OpenCL listing for A57 showed 8GB RAM. The default operating system on this phone will be Android 16 overlaid with a One UI 8 skin.
This newcomer won’t show up in the market until March 2026, which means there’s still a lot that can change in the next several months. They might tweak its performance for better results. We can’t wait to discover more about this device. As leaks progress, we’ll have more to share with you about Galaxy A57. Keep watching the news for updates.