MediaTek over the last few years has generally always been regarded as the “other” SoC vendor in the mobile industry, with most media and consumer attention being paid to the flagship SoC products by the likes of Apple, Qualcomm, Samsung and HiSilicon. Indeed, the last time MediaTek had attempted a true flagship SoC was several years ago with the Helio X20 and X30, before seeing very little success in the market and instead refocusing on the mid-range and “premium” segments.

Today, MediaTek is looking to change this positioning. After seeing new-found success in the market, particularly seeing a fantastic 2020 and 2021, where the Taiwanese vendor is now able to claim the #1 spot with 40% market share, as well as a growing 28% of 5G SoC market share, the company is now also aiming for recognition and leadership position in the flagship SoC market – this is where the new Dimensity 9000 comes in.

The Dimensity 9000 is MediaTek’s latest effort in creating a no-compromise flagship SoC, with the designers throwing in everything but the kitchen sink at it in terms of specifications, representing a lot of industry firsts, such as the first Armv9 SoC with Cortex-X2, A710’s and A510’s CPUs, a new Mali-G710 GPU, first LPDDR5X compatible SoC, astounding camera ISP claims, and the first outright publicly announced TSMC N4 silicon design in the industry. The list of features and capabilities is extensive, and the announcement today definitely represents MediaTek’s largest effort in generations and years.

Starting off with the process node, MediaTek is able to claim a first in the industry, with the Dimensity 9000 being the world’s first TSMC N4 chip. Over the past few years, we’ve always been accustomed that either Apple or HiSilicon be the very first customers on TSMC’s latest leading-edge nodes. With HiSilicon being cut-off from TSMC, that left Apple as the obvious lead partner for TSMC’s new generation process nodes – however, the timing here just didn’t work out for the A15 as the N4 node just wasn’t ready yet. With Qualcomm currently being tied to Samsung Foundry for their flagships (arguably with not great success), this left a vacuum for where HiSilicon used to be, which MediaTek is now looking to fill. In fact, I think this would be the company’s first time where they’re truly on a leading edge node since the 20nm days.

TSMC’s N4 node is supposed to be a smaller optical shrink over the N5 node, resulting in 6% more density, with similar single-digit improvements in performance and efficiency. TSMC had announced risk production for N4 to start in 3Q21, and with the Dimensity 9000 planned to hit commercial devices in 1Q22, the chip is likely the lead product for the process node.

New MediaTek Flagship SoC 2022
SoC

Dimensity 9000

CPU 1x Cortex-X2
@ 3.05GHz 1x1024KB pL2

3x Cortex-A710
@ 2.85GHz 3x512KB pL2

4x Cortex-A510
@ 1.80GHz 4x256KB pL2

8MB sL3
GPU Mali-G710MP10
@ ~850MHz
Memory
Controller
4x 16-bit CH

@ 3200MHz LPDDR5   /  51.2GB/s
@ 3750MHz LPDDR5X / 60.0GB/s

6MB System Cache
ISP Imagiq790
New-gen Triple 18-bit ISP
9GPix/s processing throughput

Single Sensor up to 320MP
Triple Sensor 32+32+32MP
NPU 5th Gen 4+2 core APU
Media 8K30 & 4K120 encode &
8K60 decode

H.265/HEVC, H.264, VP9

8K30 AV1 Decode
Modem (LTE Category 24/18)
(5G NR Sub-6)
Mfc. Process TSMC N4

There’s a lot to talk about the Dimensity 9000, so obviously enough as MediaTek advertises it as the first Armv9 SoC, let’s start off with the CPU configuration and the various IPs employed here.

No-Compromise CPU Setup

Being an Armv9 SoC, this means that the company is refreshing all the CPU IPs, employing the new Cortex-X2, Cortex-A710, and Cortex-A510 IPs from Arm. We had covered the new generation CPUs extensive earlier this year, so be sure to read up on those articles.

The Dimensity 9000 goes with a 1+3+4 CPU setup that has seen popularity in the market ever since Qualcomm had adopted the setup for the first time in the Snapdragon 855. For the performance cores, MediaTek uses the new Cortex-X2 cores, equipping them with the full 1MB of L2 cache, and clocking them at up to 3.05GHz. The clock frequency is higher than what we’re seeing from designs today on X1 cores such as the Snapdragon 888 or the Exynos 2100 at respectively 2.86 and 2.9GHz, but those competing SoCs were also on an inferior Samsung 5LPE process node. We don’t yet know exactly where the next-gen Snapdragon and Exynos chips will end up in terms of clocks, but I think it’s unlikely they will exceed the 3GHz mark, leaving the new Dimensity 9000 with a likely frequency advantage, and thus also a likely single-threaded performance leadership position amongst the Android SoC vendors.

MediaTek does quote a +35% performance leap over current generation Android Flagship chips, which we assume is going to be a Snapdragon 888, however also states that efficiency is +37% better. This would mean that peak absolute power levels for the MediaTek 9000’s X2 cores would be similar to what we’re seeing from the X1 cores in a Snapdragon 888 today, which generally is a good position to be in, and the figures generally line up with what we expect from the IPC and process node differences between the designs.

MediaTek did note that the performance leap in more memory-bound workloads to be much higher than more core-local workloads, for example SPECint2006 seeing a +35% increase, while GeekBench 5 only will see a +10.5% increase over the competition. This generally also lines up with our understanding of the Cortex-X2, pointing out to low IPC improvements in anything that’s not taking advantage of the increase caches of the CPU cluster.

The middle cores of the Dimensity 9000 are 3x Cortex-A710 cores, equipped with 512KB L2’s, and clocked up to 2.85GHz. In this regard, MediaTek’s approach here is more similar to the Exynos 2100 in that it’s using quite high frequency mid-cores, in contrast to the lower 2.4GHz design point Qualcomm employs.

Alongside the middle cores, we also see the new Cortex-A510 little cores, and here MediaTek is doing things quite differently compared to what we expected from the first iterations of the IP. Instead of using Arm’s new “merged-core” approach, where a Cortex-A510 complex can consist of two cores sharing a SIMD/FP pipeline as well as a shared L2, MediaTek completely ignores this design aspect of the IP and instead goes the traditional route of only using one core per complex, with each core thus having its own SIMD/FP pipeline and private L2 cache. The cache here lies in at 256KB, which is also quite large, and short of the 512KB maximum. In effect, what MediaTek has done here is to configure the A510 cores with a near-maximum performance setup. While we still have our reservations about the cores, it’s good to see MediaTek not skimping out on the new designs.

Due to the strongly configured middle cores, as well as well equipped little cores, the multi-core performance of the Dimensity 9000 is advertised as well exceeding the current Android competition, and falling in line with Apple achieves on the A15.

At the cluster level, MediaTek also equips the DSU with 8MB of L3 – this is likely the new generation DSU-110 as well.

On the CPU side, the Dimensity 9000 is essentially configured in the most optimal way – MediaTek went all-out in terms of frequencies and caches, and it’s generally hard to imagine a more performant configuration than what the chip is currently set up with, at least in the context of Arm Cortex CPU IP.

First LPDDR5X, Large System Cache

Another world first for the Dimensity 9000 is the fact that it’s the first chip announced to be compatible with LPDDR5X. The standard had only been published by JEDEC in July of this year, so the fact that the chip already supports it means that MediaTek was working off a draft and should be fully compatible with the new standard. While the full standard is advertised to go up to 8533Mbps support, the chip here does limit itself to 7500Mbps, so that means +17% bandwidth compared to current generation LPDDR5-6400 solutions. Still, I hadn’t expected LP5X SoCs until next late next year, so this was definitely a surprise. Naturally, the memory controller still fully supports LPDDR5 at up to 6400Mbps in case a vendor chooses to employ different memory modules.

The Dimensity 9000 is MediaTek’s first SoC also employing a system cache at 6MB. During the briefing, MediaTek noted that larger caches and SoC designs with system caches are definitely the way forward and is where everybody will be aiming for in the future. System level caches, or how we like to call them abbreviated, SLCs, are able to amplify performance of SoC blocks other than just the CPU, as well as reduce the memory traffic to DRAM, also having a positive benefit to power efficiency.

GPU: Mali G710MP10

On the GPU side of things, the MediaTek Dimensity 9000 is also the first SoC to see the deployment of the new Mali-G710 GPU. Earlier this year when we talked about the IP we had mentioned that MediaTek was the only remaining vendor that was expected to release an SoC with a larger Mali GPU implementation, given HiSilicon’s troubles and Samsung’s adoption of AMD RDNA GPUs.

The configuration on the Dimensity 9000 is a 10-core. We have to remember here that in terms of per-core performance one new G710 core is roughly equivalent to two G78 cores, so in terms of size and performance the new chip’s GPU is roughly comparable to the Google Tensor G78MP20 GPU, plus maybe an expected 20% performance boost due to generational IP improvements. MediaTek noted the peak frequencies to be at around 850MHz (exact clock to be confirmed).

In terms of performance figures, the company’s materials advertised +35% vs the current Android flagships, while efficiency being +60% better. All of this year’s flagships had been rather disappointing in gaming efficiency, and we saw absolute power figures reaching +7.5-9W on the leading Exynos, Tensor and Snapdragon chips. MediaTek noting that their efficiency advantage is significantly larger than their performance leap also suggests they’re using lower peak power levels that what we see today, which is definitely a welcome change.

The company makes note of Ray Tracing capability, but this is simply a software API implementation rather than hardware, as the G710 doesn’t yet support this.

MediaTek had a slide showcasing longer term performance versus an iPhone 13 with the A15, with the Dimensity 9000 being able to slightly exceed the performance of the iPhone. We saw that the new iPhones throttle to around 3-3.5W, and that under cellular conditions the phones are reported to perform even worse due to the bad thermals. MediaTek notes the comparison is made under a similar thermal budget, so hopefully the comparison is valid here. It's to be noted, as we wrote in our A15 review, comparing real-world games such as Genshin Impact for GPU analysis isn’t great as the game always runs at different internal resolutions or detail levels, especially between Android and iOS.

That being said, MediaTek’s efficiency claims for the GPU do position it extremely well, and would likely allow it to effectively compete against the upcoming Snapdragon and Exynos chips which are still projected to arrive on less efficient process nodes.

Low-Power Leadership Claims

An interesting claim from MediaTek is that they are achieving low power leadership, thanks to the new TSMC N4 node as well as the smart power management the SoC as well as the platform is designed with.

The above figures are comparisons of platforms total power, excluding power supply towards the display panel. This means we’re seeing a power comparison of the SoC, DRAM, PMICs, cellular RF and Wi-Fi systems – essentially the “platform” components which the SoC vendors are generally responsive for and which they bundle their offerings with.

Notable figures here are the media playback and recording numbers, where the Dimensity 9000 is said to have much lower power consumption than the competition. Gaming power is also said to be lower, but this is to be expected given the GPU efficiency and lower power claims.

The one data-point I find most interesting is the home idle power. One of the hardest things to achieve in a silicon design is doing nothing in an efficient manner, this actually represents a large percentage of energy consumption and affects the baseline power of a device, and thus your every-day battery life. Getting -20% over the competition here is quite respectable.

5th Generation APU/NPU, a Massive ISP, and New 5G & WiFi
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  • at_clucks - Sunday, November 21, 2021 - link

    Hundreds of thousands of people are homeless around him every day, thousands die, but the dude is worried about how evil communists are. Most people are minimally educated, and most of that minimal education is propaganda.

    I guess our friend there never noticed capitalism has no humanity in it either, people are homeless or poisoned every day *because* their well-being can't be quantified on a balance sheet, or worse, because harming their well-being can be quantified in the extra profit it allows. Hell, the Flint water crisis would have cost $80/day to avoid and yet 20000 children alone were exposed to dangerous levels of lead to save that money.

    People just need to bury their head in the sand and assume they're on the right side of morality. We are good so they are bad.
  • mode_13h - Monday, November 22, 2021 - link

    > people are homeless or poisoned every day *because* their well-being can't be
    > quantified on a balance sheet, or worse, because harming their well-being can be
    > quantified in the extra profit it allows.

    These are not problems capitalism was intended to solve. That's the role of government. It's government's job to put guard rails on what corporations can do, so that their interests don't run counter to that of the citizens. How well it's done varies, but the solution is to improve government's regulation of the economy, rather than to dispense with capitalism altogether.

    > the Flint water crisis

    That wasn't a corporate decision. It was the indebted state of Michigan trying to save money in a reckless and incompetent way. It has nothing to do with your previous point.
  • at_clucks - Wednesday, November 24, 2021 - link

    @mode_13h "These are not problems capitalism was intended to solve"

    No but ignoring them is a act lacking humanity from all those "capitalist" individuals, making it particularly ironic for AnsyX to act worried about how "communists have no humanity". And do I really need to keep giving you examples of how capitalists have proven heartless again and again in that ultimate capitalist quest of maximizing profits?

    Also I can make 2 points in a single comment. The state of Michigan is, to my knowledge, almost entirely capitalist both as population and leadership. Any action lacking humanity there is "capitalist lack of humanity".

    Just trying to highlight how asinine is for someone to come here and say how they fought communists and they have no humanity. That kind of conviction and use of a very wide brush non-ironically or just to make a counterpoint is representative of low education and/or IQ.
  • mode_13h - Thursday, November 25, 2021 - link

    > do I really need to keep giving you examples of how capitalists have proven heartless

    No. It's been said that many CEOs have sociopathic tendencies. The actions of corporations, if performed by a person, would definitely earn that person the label of a sociopath. That's where regulations are supposed to enter the picture. It's somewhat necessarily so, because "values" are hard to quantify, and one corporation will always argue that if they don't seize every opportunity and cut every cost, their competitors would, anyhow.

    > The state of Michigan is, to my knowledge, almost entirely capitalist both as population
    > and leadership. Any action lacking humanity there is "capitalist lack of humanity".

    It exists in a capitalistic context, but it's not a for-profit entity. The goal of States is merely to balance their budgets, not make money. They face resource-management problems, just as states in communist countries would. Communism doesn't erase the fact that resources are finite, and even communist countries use money and have economic systems.
  • Arbie - Saturday, November 20, 2021 - link

    Just noting: Nazi = Socialist is common on the alt-right deploraboards. That way they can conclude that Dems = Liberals = Socialists = Communists = Nazis.
  • smalM - Monday, November 22, 2021 - link

    Nazi is short for Nationalsozialist = national socialist. The acronym was created after Sozi = Sozialist = socialist.
    It is a leftist tall tale that the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei wasn't a socialist party.
  • melgross - Monday, November 22, 2021 - link

    The Nazi’s were socialists. Hitler said so in his own writings. If you knew anything about their economy, you would know that.
  • imoc - Wednesday, December 8, 2021 - link

    LOL true. It's almost 2022 and people still think China is communist.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Friday, November 19, 2021 - link

    Taiwanese is a race, not a type of government, you bigot.
  • Peter2k - Friday, November 19, 2021 - link

    Taiwan is a democratic nation that isn't even recognized by 99% of other nations
    It's way closer to call it a government then a nation, since no one really recognizes it in an official manner

    If you mean native Taiwanese, sure they are they're own race

    But no one really means that, that's like Japan also has natives who are not genetically linked to Japanese as they themselves see them

    Taiwanese are ethically Chinese
    They migrated there for a few hundred years until finally the Kuomintang lost and retreated there with like 2 million in tow

    But hey, at least you got to call some random person on the internet a bigot over an issue that will likely spark WWIII

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