Possible new Google Pixel flagship rears its head with Tensor G6 – NotebookCheck.net News
What could be the Pixel 11 Pro XL has appeared on Geekbench. Sporting a rather strange chipset, the device also features just 12 GB RAM despite its flagship credentials. Google’s Tensor G6 chipset may depart from its predecessors with fewer CPU cores than previously rumoured.
Google has just released the Pixel 10a globally (curr. $499 on Amazon). In previous years, the company has equipped its A series smartphones with the same chipset generation as their flagship counterparts. However, the Pixel 10a arrived with the older Tensor G4 instead of the Tensor G5 found across other Pixel 10 smartphones.
Now, a leaked Geekbench listing suggests that Google is plotting an unusual departure for the forthcoming Pixel 11 series. As always, the benchmarking platform does not provide a retail name. Nonetheless, ‘Google Kodiak’ has already been established as the codename for the Pixel 10 Pro XL.
Previously, the company was expected to have based the Tensor G6 around TSMC’s N3P node with one ARM Cortex-X930 prime core, six Cortex-A730 performance cores and a Cortex-A530 efficiency core. If an early Geekbench leak is anything to go by, then the Tensor G6 may have one fewer CPU core than previously believed.
Specifically, the benchmark listing mentions a prime core clocked at 4.11 GHz, with four cores in cluster 2 hitting 3.38 GHz and two cores in cluster 3 reaching 2.65 GHz. Moreover, the listing references 12 GB of RAM and a PowerVR C-series CXTP-48-1536 iGPU to replace the DXT-48-1536 inside the Tensor G5. At this stage, there is no guarantee that this listing is genuine. The Pixel 11 series is not expected until the summer, nor is the Tensor G6 chipset.
Alex Alderson – Senior Tech Writer – 14308 articles published on Notebookcheck since 2018
Prior to writing and translating for Notebookcheck, I worked for various companies including Apple and Neowin. I have a BA in International History and Politics from the University of Leeds, which I have since converted to a Law Degree. Happy to chat on Twitter or Notebookchat.
Alex Alderson, 2026-02-26 (Update: 2026-02-26)