Two records about Pixel 6 Pro are listed on GeekBench, showing the different configurations of Tensor SoC, which naturally led to huge performance differences. A newer record shows that Pixel 6 Pro has two X1 cores; the previous record shows only a single X1 core.
It is worth noting that the GeekBench running sub-database records are often tampered with by unscrupulous users, so we should be cautious about the results of Pixel 6 Pro. In the latest GeekBench record, the 12GB Pixel 6 Pro uses 2.84 GHz (ARM Cortex-X1) cores, 2 @2.25 GHz (A78) cores, and 4 @1.80 GHz (A55) cores.
In the previous record, Pixel 6 Pro only has 1 X1 core 2.84 GHz but has 3 powerful cores 2.42 GHz and 4 efficient cores 1.80 GHz. The single-core and multi-core scores generated in this particular benchmark run are more competitive with SD 888 and Exynos 2100.
The two results show a huge performance difference. If calculated as a percentage, the score obtained by the 1x3x4x configuration is 112.80% (single-core performance) and +41.66% (multi-core performance) higher than the score of the 2x2x4x variant. The higher score is basically comparable to flagships such as Samsung and Xiaomi, while the lower score is lower than the Pixel 3 equipped with the Snapdragon 845.