Yesterday, pictures of an unannounced LG phone codenamed “Liger” surfaced, along with benchmarks to showcase the phone’s LG-made processor, a chipset that has been running under the codename “Odin” for some time. To get out ahead of any additional leaks, or because that leak was perfectly timed and orchestrated, LG finished off the day by announcing both the phone and processor. The phone is called the LG G3 Screen; the processor is the company’s first in-house made chipset known as NUCLUN.

The processor, again is LG’s first mobile application processor, employs four 1.5GHz Cortex A15 cores for high performance and four 1.2GHz Cortex A7 cores for “less intensive processing.” Do the math and you get an 8-core chipset that will be used in high-end smartphones. If you were worried about LTE connectivity, just know that this chipset supports LTE-A Cat.6 networks, so it’s ready for prime time. LG says that this NUCLUN processor is all about “high performance and low energy consumption.”

As for the phone, you are looking at a device running the NUCLUN, but also with a 5.9-inch Full HD IPS display, 32GB internal storage, micro SD slot, 2GB RAM, 13MP rear camera with OIS+, 3,000mAh, and Android 4.4. This is like a bigger version of the LG G3, but with a lower resolution display.

LG did not mention release information for the G3 Screen.