Today alongside with the launch of the Xiaomi Redmi K30 5G Racing Edition, Qualcomm is announcing the new Snapdragon 768G SoC which powers the device. The new SoC is a direct follow-up to the Snapdragon 765G announced last December, and the two chips are very likely the same silicon design, with the new variant increasing the clock frequencies.
| Qualcomm Snapdragon Premium SoCs 2019-2020 | ||||
| SoC | Snapdragon 768G | Snapdragon 765 Snapdragon 765G | Snapdragon 730 | |
| CPU | 1x Cortex A76 @ 2.8GHz 
 
 | 1x Cortex A76 @ 2.3GHz (non-G) @ 2.4GHz (765G) 
 
 | 2x Cortex-A76 @ 2.2GHz 6x Cortex-A55 @ 1.8GHz | |
| GPU | Adreno 620 +15% perf over 765G | Adreno 620 +20% perf (non-G) +38% perf (765G) | Adreno 618 | |
| DSP / NPU | Hexagon 696 HVX + Tensor 5.4TOPS AI | Hexagon 688 HVX + Tensor | ||
| Memory Controller | 2x 16-bit CH 
 | 2x 16-bit CH 
 | ||
| ISP/Camera | Dual 14-bit Spectra 355 ISP 1x 192MP or 36MP with ZSL or 2x 22MP with ZSL | Dual Spectra 350 ISP 1x 36MP with ZSL or 2x 22MP with ZSL | ||
| Encode/ Decode | 2160p30, 1080p120 H.264 & H.265 
 | |||
| Integrated Modem | Snapdragon X52 Integrated 
 (5G NR Sub-6 4×4 100MHz | Snapdragon X15 LTE 
 | ||
| Mfc. Process | Samsung 7nm EUV (7LPP) | Samsung 8nm (8LPP) | ||
The new chip features the same Cortex-A76 cores in a 1+1 configuration (one Prime high-clocked core, and one medium clocked core), alongside 6 Cortex-A55 cores. The difference in CPU performance lies in the frequencies of the big cores which are now at up to 2.8GHz and 2.4GHz for the Performance and Middle core – a more notable uplift from the 2.4 and 2.2GHz clocks of the Snapdragon 765G.
GPU clock frequencies have also been increased, resulting in at 15% performance boost over the Snapdragon 765.
The rest of the chip is seemingly identical to the Snapdragon 765 series. What’s interesting here is that Qualcomm does name it quite differently in its SKU line-up. While it very much shares the design of the Snapdragon 765, it’s also a possibility that it’s a silicon respin of the chip, the timelines certainly would make sense and it’s also not the first time that Qualcomm would have done this (Snapdragon 821 is an example of this). If the increased clocks come at a cost of higher power draw or loss of efficiency is anybody’s guess right now – there’s also the possibility that yields on Samsung’s 7LPP node has improved and thus enabled the higher frequencies.
Related Reading:
- Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon 865 and 765(G): 5G For All in 2020, All The Details
- Qualcomm Goes For The Mid-Range: Snapdragon 765 and 765G
- Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon 665 & 730 Platforms: 11 & 8nm
Source: AnandTech – Qualcomm Announces Snapdragon 768G: Higher-bin 765 up to 2.8GHz
 
			