
It was previously reported that the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series will debut alongside the foldable Galaxy Z series at the company’s latest Galaxy Unpacked event on July 10. Unfortunately, there was no mention of next-generation tablets at Samsung’s presentation. Now there are rumors that the South Korean brand will launch the Galaxy Tab S10 series in October. While we wait for Samsung to officially confirm its launch plans, a new leak has revealed details about the tablet’s hardware. The Galaxy Tab S10 series is expected to include two devices – the Galaxy Tab S10+ and the Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra.
The Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series will be powered by the MediaTek Dimensity SoC.
Powered by MediaTek’s Dimensity 9300+ mobile processor, the Tipster Ice Universe is a powerful octa-core chip with four cores clocked at 2.0GHz, three cores clocked at up to 2.85GHz, and the main core clocked at 3.4GHz. The platform supports up to LPDDR5T-9600 RAM and UFS 4.0 storage.
If these claims are true, it would be a significant change for Samsung, which has been powering its high-end tablets with Snapdragon chipsets for several years. All three models of last year’s Galaxy Tab S9 family use a Galaxy-specific Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 SoC.
Similarly, the Galaxy Tab S8 models launched in 2022 came with the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 SoC. You should take these claims with a grain of salt, as Samsung has yet to reveal any details about the Galaxy Tab S10 series.
According to the latest rumors, the Samsung Galaxy Tab S10 series will be released in October. Samsung is expected to ditch the regular Galaxy Tab S10 model this time and focus on the Galaxy Tab S10+ and Galaxy Tab S10 Ultra models.
The Plus variant was previously spotted on Geekbench with the model number SM-X828U. The listing says that the device is powered by a MediaTek Dimensity 9300+ chipset, 12GB of RAM, and Android 14.
Bhupendra Singh Chundawat is a seasoned technology journalist with over 22 years of experience in the media industry. He specializes in covering the global technology landscape, with a deep focus on manufacturing trends and the geopolitical impact on tech companies. Currently serving as the Editor at Udaipur Kiran, his insights are shaped by decades of hands-on reporting and editorial leadership in the fast-evolving world of technology.




