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Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Benchmark score, spec sheet, and more

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300
Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 is the first non-Elite chipset to feature the powerful Oryon cores. The chipset offers solid gaming performance, a flagship-grade ISP, and reliable connectivity, making it a powerful choice among premium mid-range phones.

On the other hand, the Dimensity 9300 is two years older than the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. Still, it offers smooth performance and excellent efficiency to be considered a reliable choice, and more importantly, at a lower price.

So, the real question is: does it make sense to go with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5, or is the Dimensity 9300 a solid choice at a relatively lower price? Let’s find out in this detailed comparison.

Quick verdict:

Choose Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 if you want higher CPU performance, sustained gaming performance, flagship ISP, and modern connectivity features.
Choose Dimensity 9300 if you want reliable performance and excellent efficiency at a lower price point.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Spec sheet

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5Dimensity 9300
AnnouncedNovember 2025November 2023
Process node3 nm (TSMC)4 nm (TSMC)
CPU2 × 3.8 GHz (Oryon Gen 3 – Prime)
6 × 3.32 GHz (Oryon Gen 3 – Performance)
1 × 3.25 GHz (Cortex-X4)
3 × 2.85 GHz (Cortex-X4)
4 × 2.0 GHz (Cortex-A720)
GPUAdreno 829
ray tracing support
Snapdragon Elite Gaming features
Arm Immortalis-G720 MP12
console-level global illumination effects
ray tracing support
MediaTek HyperEngine Adaptive Gaming Technology
NPUQualcomm Hexagon NPU
Agentic AI support
MediaTek NPU 790
up to 33 billion parameters
on-device LoRA Fusion support
MemoryLPDDR5x, up to 4.8 GHzLPDDR5T, up to 4.8 GHz
StorageUFS 4.1UFS 4 + MCQ
CameraQualcomm Spectra triple AI ISP (20-bit)
up to 320MP single camera
up to 108MP single camera with zero shutter lag, 30fps
up to 48MP triple cameras with zero shutter lag, 30fps
up to 4K/120fps video recording
real-time semantic segmentation (limitless)
MediaTek Imagiq 990 ISP (18-bit)
up to 320MP single camera
up to 8K video recording
AI Semantic Analysis Video Engine
ConnectivitySnapdragon X80 5G modem
download speed: up to 10 Gbps
upload speed: up to 3.5 Gbps
Wi-Fi 7 (peak speed: 5.8 Gbps)
Bluetooth 6.0
MediaTek 5G modem
download speed: up to 7 Gbps
Wi-Fi 7 (peak speed: 6.5 Gbps)
Bluetooth 5.4

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Benchmark numbers

Note: To obtain the benchmark results, the tests were performed using these devices:
– OnePlus 15R (Snapdragon 8 Gen 5)
– Vivo X100 Pro (Dimensity 9300)

Geekbench score (v6)

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300 - Geekbench score

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 outperforms the Dimensity 9300 in both single-core and multi-core tests. In both tests, the Snapdragon chip achieves about 27% higher score, suggesting a snappier performance, particularly in tasks that require greater CPU resources.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5Dimensity 9300
Single core2,8372,208
Multi core9,3527,380

AnTuTu score (v11)

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300 - AnTuTu score

On the AnTuTu benchmark, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 scores 2.96 million, while the Dimensity 9300 sits below it with 2.32 million total score. That’s a solid 27% uplift for the Snapdragon chip.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5Dimensity 9300
AnTuTu score2,961,2362,324,872
CPU914,878692,230
GPU974,402816,259
Memory382,729338,122
UX689,228478,261

The breakdown of the AnTuTu score paints a better picture, and unsurprisingly, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 dominates all aspects. The CPU gets 32% higher score, the GPU gets 19% higher score, memory performance is up by 13%, and the UX score is up by 44%.

3DMark score

Wild Life Extreme Stress Test

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300 - 3DMark Wild Life Extreme Stress Test

This is a widely popular gaming benchmark, where the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 outperforms the Dimensity 9300 by a wide margin. It achieves a 23% higher best loop score and a whopping 71% increase in the lowest loop score. So, not just the performance, the Snapdragon chip also maintains higher stability.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5Dimensity 9300
Best loop score5,0094,062
Lowest loop score3,3211,933
Stability66.30%47.59%

While benchmarks offer great insights into performance and stability, they don’t focus on other key aspects, including connectivity, camera, and features. To give you a clearer picture, we’ve included them in the following section.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Key differences

Process node

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 uses TSMC’s newer 3nm node, which offers better performance and power efficiency than the 4nm node used in the Dimensity 9300.

Performance

CPU

Both chipsets feature octa-core CPUs, although their core configurations differ. The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 uses a (2 + 6) layout, featuring two Oryon prime cores at 3.8 GHz and six Oryon performance cores at 3.32 GHz. The Dimensity 9300 features a (1 + 3 + 4) layout, which includes one Cortex-X4 prime core at 3.25 GHz, three Cortex-X4 performance cores at 2.85 GHz, and four Cortex-A720 efficiency cores at 2.0 GHz.

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 prioritizes performance by offering a higher peak clock speed of 3.8 GHz. In fact, all the CPU cores in the Snapdragon chip run at higher clock speeds than those in the Dimensity 9300. This is one of the primary reasons the Snapdragon chip easily outperforms the Dimensity 9300 in benchmarks.

GPU

As for the gaming and graphics rendering, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 uses a powerful Adreno 829 GPU featuring Qualcomm’s “sliced” architecture. The GPU offers excellent ray tracing performance, support for Unreal Engine 5, and AI-assisted upscaling. It also bundles a full suite of Snapdragon Elite Gaming features to deliver a smooth gaming performance with consistently high frame rates, low latency, and improved power utilization.

The Dimensity 9300 features a 12-core Arm Immortalis-G720 GPU, promising console-level global illumination effects. The GPU is equipped with a 2nd-gen hardware ray tracing, which is claimed to offer “fast, full raytracing experiences at a smooth 60 fps.” The chip also features MediaTek HyperEngine Adaptive Gaming Technology to deliver flagship performance without slowdowns for up to an hour in top titles, along with better cooling and improved power efficiency.

NPU

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 features a very capable Hexagon NPU, which integrates with an Oryon CPU and Adreno GPU to enable on-device agentic assistants, multimodal AI, and heavier gen-AI workloads in high-end devices. It is essentially a slightly binned-down version of the 8 Elite Gen 5 AI platform, with nearly all of the same features but lower peak clocks.

The Dimensity 9300’s AI stack is built around the MediaTek NPU 790, which delivers substantial efficiency and speed gains over the previous generation. It can run LLMs with up to 33 billion parameters and real-time generative AI. The AI stack enables the SoC to run multi-modal, multi-LLMs setups at usable latencies, entirely on-device.

Camera

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 features a 20-bit Spectra AI ISP with up to 320MP single camera and up to 4K/120fps video recording, although OEMs can enable up to 8K recording. The chip also supports limitless real-time semantic segmentation for precise optimizations. Plus, it offers a range of camera features (including AI-assisted features) to deliver greater quality with less noise.

On the other hand, the Dimensity 9300 is equipped with an 18-bit Imagiq 990 ISP, supporting up to 320MP single-camera and up to 8K video recording. The chip features an AI Semantic Analysis Video Engine with 16 categories of scene segmentation adjustments for enhanced cinematic video capture. It also features zero-latency video preview and 100% pixel-level autofocus + dual-lossless zoom.

Connectivity

While both chips offer robust connectivity, there are several important differences to consider. On a 5G connection, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5’s download speed can reach up to 10 Gbps, while the Dimensity 9300 peaks at 7 Gbps. The Dimensity chip bounces back with a higher peak Wi-Fi 7 speed, reaching 6.5 Gbps (vs. 5.8 Gbps on the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5). Another advantage of the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 is its support for Bluetooth 6.0, while the Dimensity 9300 supports the older Bluetooth 5.3 standard.

Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Which is better?

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 is clearly a much better choice over the Dimensity 9300. It offers solid CPU performance, a more consistent gaming performance, and a modern connectivity stack. Plus, it features the advanced Spectra ISP from the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, integrating the latest camera features and advanced camera optimizations.

That said, the Dimensity 9300 is still a solid mid-range chipset in 2026. It can smoothly run your day-to-day apps while offering excellent efficiency. Gaming performance is also good, but for heavier games and longer sessions, you may want to prefer a more capable chipset like the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5. Perhaps the only advantage it offers over the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 is its lower price. So, if you’re getting a hefty discount on a Dimensity 9300 phone that makes it much cheaper than a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 phone, that may be a solid deal. Otherwise, the Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 is a no-brainer choice here.

The post Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 vs Dimensity 9300: Benchmark score, spec sheet, and more appeared first on Gizmochina.

Samsung may soon release One UI 8.5 beta for these Galaxy devices

One UI 8.5 beta expansion
One UI 8.5 beta expansion

The One UI 8.5 beta program was limited to the Galaxy S25 series for months, and just when users were expecting the stable rollout to begin, Samsung started expanding the beta program to more Galaxy devices.

In early March 2026, the Galaxy Z Fold 7 and Galaxy Z Flip 7 joined the One UI 8.5 beta program, and later that month, the beta expanded to the Galaxy S24 series, Galaxy S25 FE, Galaxy S24 FE, Galaxy Tab S11 series, Galaxy Z Fold 6, and Galaxy Z Flip 6. The list may still be incomplete as more Galaxy devices could get the One UI 8.5 beta in the coming weeks.

These Galaxy devices may receive One UI 8.5 beta soon

  • Galaxy S23
  • Galaxy S23+
  • Galaxy S23 Ultra
  • Galaxy Z Fold 5
  • Galaxy Z Flip 5

Earlier this week, the first One UI 8.5 beta build for these Galaxy smartphones was spotted (1, 2) on Samsung’s servers, suggesting that the brand could open the One UI 8.5 beta program for them soon.

While opening the beta program would allow more Samsung users to gain early access to the upcoming features and upgrades, it could also result in some delay to the stable rollout.

One UI 8.5 is still based on Android 16, but it uses a newer QPR2 build that brings extra features and enhancements from Google. Plus, the update includes a host of new features and changes from the One UI team, including a fully customizable Quick Settings, allowing you to resize, rearrange, and organize toggles and sliders.

The update also includes updated app icons, featuring a bit of 3D effect, for the first-party apps at least. Further, the lock screen has been updated to automatically adjust the clock and date. It can now show weather visuals based on the current conditions.

A key upgrade in One UI 8.5 is the adoption of a modern floating tab bar UI, a pill-shaped UI element with a frosted color scheme, replacing the traditional plain tab bar at the bottom. The new software introduces “Now Nudge” to proactively suggest actions and information based on the content on the screen. It also introduces some important features, including Partial screen recording, Audio broadcast, Storage share, Failed authentication lock, and Theft protection. You can read more about One UI 8.5 on this page.

Remember to visit the Samsung section on this website regularly for fresh information. If you prefer to receive news as they happen, join our Telegram channel.

The post Samsung may soon release One UI 8.5 beta for these Galaxy devices appeared first on Gizmochina.

Android 17 beta program expands to more Motorola phones

Motorola Android 17 beta program expansion
Motorola Android 17 beta program expansion

Android 16 rollout hasn’t been quick from Motorola (it’s still rolling out), but the Android 17 beta expansion from the brand is turning heads. The company has already announced the Android 17 beta program for many devices, and now a fresh set of devices has joined the party.

Motorola was the first third-party manufacturer to announce the Android 17 beta program for its devices, just a week after Google released the first Android 17 beta. The beta program has largely remained limited to mid-range Motorola phones, but the latest batch also includes some high-end models, such as the Razr 60 Ultra and Motorola Signature.

If you’re rocking any of these Motorola smartphones and belong to a supported region, you can sign up for the Android 17 beta program to get early access to the upcoming features and enhancements.

How to sign up for Motorola’s Android 17 beta program?

Note that beta builds may contain bugs and broken features. Therefore, it’s advised not to install them on a primary device. 

Here are the steps to follow:

  1. Create an account on Motorola’s community website (if you haven’t already).
  2. Visit the profile page and update your IMEI or serial number (SN) details.
  3. Opt in for MFN on your Motorola community profile.
  4. Always ensure that your phone is running the latest software.
  5. Go to the MFN Beta Testing Opportunities page to see a testing opportunity for your Motorola device.
  6. Tap on the registration link for your Motorola phone.
  7. Fill in the required details and submit your application.

Please keep in mind that Motorola may send emails regarding your beta application. So, remember to check your inbox regularly, including the spam folder.

Once your beta application is approved, you’ll receive an OTA update. It’s best to manually check for updates every few days by navigating to Settings > System updates > Check for updates.

As of writing this post, Google has released three public betas of Android 17, with more to arrive in the coming weeks. The latest OS already has reached the platform stability phase and the stable version is expected to arrive for Google Pixels in June 2026. Other brands, including Motorola, will take a few more weeks to make final changes and could start rolling it out in Q3 2026.

We’ll keep an eye on the latest development and post the same in the Motorola section on Gizmochina. Remember to visit that regularly to get fresh updates. Alternatively, you can join our Telegram channel to get instant notifications about the latest software updates and major tech headlines.

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