Qualcomm's Sixth-Generation Snapdragon 8 Supreme Edition Chip Configuration Exposed: Dual Versions SM8950 and SM8975, TSMC 2nm Process
Leak details
It has been reported by Chinese tech site iThome that Qualcomm (高通) is preparing a sixth-generation Snapdragon 8 Supreme Edition family with two distinct SKUs, codenamed SM8950 and SM8975. Reportedly both chips will be manufactured on TSMC's (台积电) 2nm node — a major leap from current flagship processes — and are positioned as the next flagship silicon for high-end Android devices. These claims remain unverified and should be treated as a leak rather than confirmed specifications.
What this could mean for devices
If true, a 2nm Snapdragon Supreme Edition would promise notable gains in performance and energy efficiency, potentially enabling heavier on-device AI, improved camera processing and longer battery life. Two SKUs suggests binning for different tiers or OEM customizations: one chip may target broad flagship volumes while the other could be reserved for ultra-premium models. Who gets which variant — and when — will matter to smartphone makers and consumers alike.
Geopolitical and supply‑chain context
The report also highlights broader supply‑chain tensions. TSMC's 2nm capacity is limited and strategically sensitive; Qualcomm is a U.S. designer relying on Taiwan-based manufacturing, and advanced-node access sits at the intersection of commercial demand and export‑control policy. With ongoing U.S.-China technology restrictions and intense competition from rivals such as MediaTek and Samsung, availability and regional rollout could be affected. For now, it has been reported that this is an early leak — expect official confirmation and more technical detail from Qualcomm or TSMC in the months ahead.
