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Android Central
Android Central
Technology
Harish Jonnalagadda

MediaTek's Dimensity 9400 is the biggest challenger to Qualcomm yet

The Mediatek logo at MWC 2024.

MediaTek has a sizeable presence in the budget and mid-range segments on the back of strong releases, but it struggled to make progress in the high-end category. Even until two years ago, most Android phones were powered by the Snapdragon 8 platform, with Qualcomm effectively monopolizing this tier.

Hardwired
(Image credit: Nicholas Sutrich / Android Central)

In  Hardwired , AC Senior Editor Harish Jonnalagadda delves into all things hardware, including phones, audio products, storage servers, and routers.

That dynamic is changing slowly; MediaTek was able to secure key design wins with the Dimensity 9200 and 9300 in the last two years, giving it a much-needed foothold in this lucrative segment. The fact that it was able to outmuscle Qualcomm to do so is all the more impressive.

A part of this has to do with the hardware itself; while Qualcomm is just now starting to use performance cores throughout in the Snapdragon 8 Elite, MediaTek has been at it for over 12 months, with both the Dimensity 9300/9300+ and 9400 powered entirely by performance cores.

Doing so allows MediaTek-powered devices to deliver better multi-core results, and that has been the case in my testing. Phones featuring the Dimensity 9300/9300+ — like the Vivo X100 Pro and Xiaomi 14T Pro — have among the highest scores in Geekbench's multi-core workloads, and while they still don't quite measure up to the A18 Pro in the iPhone 16 Pro Max, they're better than anything else available on Android.

(Image credit: Vivo)

The biggest endorsement for MediaTek's efforts in this segment is by Samsung, which is using the Dimensity 9300+ exclusively on its Galaxy Tab S10 series tablets globally. Sure, Samsung's high-end tablets don't rack up anywhere as many sales as the brand's Galaxy S24 series, but the fact that the manufacturer went with MediaTek hardware in all regions — including North America — is a vote of confidence.

It's a similar story with the Dimensity 9400, MediaTek's answer to the Snapdragon 8 Elite. The Dimensity 9400 uses the latest Cortex X925 core alongside Cortex X4 and A720 cores, and it is powering OPPO's Find X8 and 8 Pro as well as Vivo's X200 devices.

Although these devices don't have a huge presence in western markets yet, they sell in the millions in China, and OPPO and Vivo are making some progress in the high-end category in countries like India.

(Image credit: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central)

As to why a phone manufacturer would use MediaTek instead of Qualcomm, cost is likely a factor in the consideration, but most brands I talked to mention customizability as a big differentiator. MediaTek offers the ability to tailor its Dimensity platform to particular devices, and OnePlus used this to good effect in its mid-range devices in recent years.

Rivalry is a good thing in this industry, and while Qualcomm is still the dominant brand, it's good to see MediaTek offering a platform that can hold its own. Vivo's X100 Pro is one of my favorite phones of 2024, and it is just as performant as the dozens of Snapdragon 8 Gen 3-powered devices I used over the course of the year.

With Qualcomm going back to fully-custom designs after nearly a decade, it will be interesting to see how the Dimensity 9400 — which has Arm's latest cores — holds up in real-world usage against Qualcomm. 

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