The surfaced last week and the results reiterated reports that there’s going to be a in the Snapdragon 845 and Exynos 9810-powered variants of the and the Galaxy S9+. The latter has now surfaced on Geekbench and the latest results once again show that the Exynos 9810 will likely not leave much to be desired in the performance category.
Galaxy S9+ Exynos 9810 Geekbench scores
The benchmark result for the Galaxy S9+ SM-G965F returns single-core and multi-core scores of 3773 and 9024, respectively. and runs Android 8.0 Oreo. The scores are slightly higher than the Exynos 9810-powered Galaxy S9 which returned a single-core score of 3648 and multi-core score of 8894. The Galaxy S9 doesn’t come with 6GB of RAM, though, .
Both Exynos variants have returned significantly higher scores than the Snapdragon 845 which Samsung will use for the Galaxy S9 and the Galaxy S9+ . returned median scores of 2400 and 8400.
Samsung has been criticized for better optimization of its Exynos variants compared to the Snapdragon variants in the past but if these results are anything to go by, will be in a league of its own.
As we’ve mentioned many times in the past, benchmark results don’t reveal the full story about a device’s performance but they do give us an idea of what to expect. Moreover, benchmark results can easily be faked as well, even if the results look within the realm of possibility.
We’ll get a better picture of the real-world performance of the Galaxy S9 and the Galaxy S9+ once the device is released next month. Samsung will unveil its new flagship .
The post appeared first on .
Galaxy S9+ Exynos 9810 Geekbench scores
The benchmark result for the Galaxy S9+ SM-G965F returns single-core and multi-core scores of 3773 and 9024, respectively. and runs Android 8.0 Oreo. The scores are slightly higher than the Exynos 9810-powered Galaxy S9 which returned a single-core score of 3648 and multi-core score of 8894. The Galaxy S9 doesn’t come with 6GB of RAM, though, .
Both Exynos variants have returned significantly higher scores than the Snapdragon 845 which Samsung will use for the Galaxy S9 and the Galaxy S9+ . returned median scores of 2400 and 8400.
Samsung has been criticized for better optimization of its Exynos variants compared to the Snapdragon variants in the past but if these results are anything to go by, will be in a league of its own.
As we’ve mentioned many times in the past, benchmark results don’t reveal the full story about a device’s performance but they do give us an idea of what to expect. Moreover, benchmark results can easily be faked as well, even if the results look within the realm of possibility.
We’ll get a better picture of the real-world performance of the Galaxy S9 and the Galaxy S9+ once the device is released next month. Samsung will unveil its new flagship .
The post appeared first on .