Samsung launched the Galaxy A56 in March, and the company is now preparing its successor, the Galaxy A57. The upcoming model has appeared on Geekbench, revealing the chipset that will power the device.
A prototype of the Galaxy A57 ran on Geekbench earlier today. The listing shows the phone uses Samsung’s new Exynos 1680 processor, which replaces the Exynos 1580 found in the Galaxy A56.
Because this is an early test, the benchmark scores are not final. The device recorded a single-core score of 1,311 and a multi-core score of 4,347 in Geekbench 6.5 for Android.
The A57 prototype tested on Geekbench carried 12GB of RAM. Samsung offered the same maximum memory option on the A56. The benchmark also confirms that the new device is running Android 16, which aligns with expectations for an early 2026 launch.
According to the benchmark, the Exynos 1680 has:
Compared to the Exynos 1580, the main change appears to be one additional performance core and one fewer efficiency core, while the clock speeds remain similar. However, these specifications may still change if this unit is an engineering prototype.