Just when Qualcomm’s chip naming scheme couldn’t get any more crowded, two fresh entries have appeared on the company’s leaked Snapdragon 8 roadmap — and both ditch the headline-grabbing 2nm process for something a little more grounded.
According to reliable tipster Digital Chat Station, Qualcomm is quietly developing a Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5XX (part number SM8850Q) and a Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 Pro (part number SM8845 Pro). Both are built on a 3nm process node, which positions them as the sensible middle ground in a lineup increasingly dominated by exotic, expensive silicon.
The logic is easy to follow. Qualcomm’s flagship ambitions are pinned on its 2nm parts — most notably the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 Pro (SM8975), which is shaping up to be the company’s first 2nm mobile chip. That part reportedly uses a next-generation 2+3+3 Oryon CPU layout with a shared 16MB L2 cache, paired with an Adreno 850-class GPU carrying 18MB of dedicated graphics memory. Impressive, yes — but also the kind of hardware that risks being overkill (and over-budget) for plenty of premium phones that don’t need bleeding-edge fabrication.
That’s where the 3nm duo comes in. The Elite Gen 5XX and the 8 Gen 5 Pro look designed to plug the gaps where a full 2nm chip would be either unnecessary or simply too costly, giving phone makers more flexibility across price tiers without forcing them onto the most cutting-edge — and supply-constrained — node.
A few caveats are worth stressing here. This is a leaked roadmap, not an official reveal. Qualcomm hasn’t confirmed any of these chips, their specifications, or where they’ll slot into future devices. The part numbers and process nodes are what we have to go on, and beyond that the picture stays deliberately fuzzy.
- Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5XX — model SM8850Q, 3nm
- Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 Pro — model SM8845 Pro, 3nm
- Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 Pro — model SM8975, 2nm, 2+3+3 Oryon CPU, 16MB shared L2 cache, Adreno 850-class GPU with 18MB graphics memory
What’s emerging is a Snapdragon 8 family that’s branching out rather than simply marching forward. Instead of one monolithic flagship, Qualcomm appears to be assembling a tiered stack — 2nm parts at the top, 3nm options filling in beneath them. For phone buyers, that could eventually mean more genuinely premium silicon at more sensible prices. For anyone trying to keep the model names straight, it means a headache that’s only getting worse.