According to the latest rumors, MediaTek would have revised its initial plans, deciding to pair a “Pro” variant with its upcoming flagship processor, the Dimensity 9600.
This strategic move stems from the clear desire to directly respond to Qualcomm and its upcoming Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 6 Pro.
Insights provided by the well-known informant Digital Chat Station indicate that the Taiwanese company aims to achieve performance comparable to desktop PCs, pushing clock speeds up to the impressive threshold of 5,00 GHz.
MediaTek Dimensity 9600 Pro: an unprecedented configuration for maximum power

To reach such milestones, the Asian company designed a completely redesigned internal architecture. Unlike the previous Dimensity 9500, which relied on a single high-performance core, the upcoming processor will adopt a configuration based on two “super cores”.
This particular cluster, structured according to the 2 + 3 + 3 scheme, represents an absolute novelty for the company and will guarantee a substantial performance increase in both single-threaded operations and in complex ones.
The realization of this ambitious project will be entrusted to the TSMC foundry, which will use its advanced 2-nanometer manufacturing process, named N2P. The next-generation node should provide the essential margin to handle the high frequencies foreseen by the designers and ensure a solid base on which to operate.
The temperature challenge and physical limitations
However, implementing computational power that high in pocket-sized devices poses a challenge of enormous scale.
Traditional computers can rely on bulky heat sinks to maintain suitable operating temperatures, while smartphones must rely on vapor chambers, small fans, or, in the most extreme and experimental cases, liquid cooling modules.
Leaked information suggests that, at the moment, MediaTek has not yet found a completely effective method to dissipate the heat generated by the Dimensity 9600 Pro when operating at full capacity. The overheating therefore represents the main obstacle to the chip’s full potential.
Because of these physiological difficulties in heat dissipation, the processor could be forced to drastically reduce its frequencies to avoid hardware damage.
Thermal throttling would reduce the clock speed from 5.00 GHz to a much more conservative and manageable range, between 4.00 GHz and 4.20 GHz.
The situation could be further complicated by MediaTek’s decision to rely on the standard ARM processor designs, which risk being less efficient under heavy stress than competitor architectures that are fully customized, such as Qualcomm’s Oryon cores.
Consequently, peaks could be limited to very short time windows, before the inevitable heat buildup imposes a preventive slowdown.



