Samsung Galaxy M33 5G runs Geekbench with Exynos 1200 SoC, has 6,000 mAh battery
Samsung is working on a successor to the Galaxy M32 from earlier this year, which will not surprisingly be called the Galaxy M33. A prototype of this model has been spotted in the Geekbench database today, where it appeared with the Exynos 1200 chipset at the helm.
It’s the same SoC that the Galaxy A53 5G was caught in running the same benchmark with, and their results are also pretty similar, not surprisingly. It’s actually likely that the Galaxy M33 will be a rebranded A53, but with one big difference – a much larger battery.
The Galaxy M33’s cell has already been certified by SafetyKorea, and this process reveals that we are looking at a 6,000 mAh device with the model number EB-BM336ABN. The Galaxy M32 also has a 6,000 mAh battery, so its successor wins nothing in this category. Then again, these would mean that you have to spend for these processes.
The Galaxy M33 prototype that ran Geekbench had 6GB of RAM, though the phone may be offered in multiple memory / storage configurations when launched. Speaking of launch, when the prototype ran Android 12, we expect the finished product to debut with that version of the OS, which means it’s still a few weeks out – it’s Samsung’s flagships that usually get the credit for launching first with the latest iteration of the software. This is also confirmed by the fact that we have not yet seen further leaks about the M33. Still, the locks are now open, so be prepared for what comes next.