The Honor 9, surprise, surprise, employs the same Kirin 960 chip found inside the P10 and Mate 9. It is developed in-house by Huawei's chipmaker HiSilicon and has been around for some time now. Even with a few months of history behind it, the Kirin 960 is still one of the most powerful smartphone chips, and we are glad to welcome it in our testing lab once again. Most of the Honor 9 models come with 6GB of RAM, great for multi-tasking.
The main processor within the chipset consists of a quad-core Cortex-A73 cluster clocked at 2.4GHz, plus a quad-core array of the familiar Cortex-A53 cores, ticking at 1.8GHz. The Cortex-A73s boast a 30% power efficiency compared to the previous A72 design, while delivering improved performance at the same time.
We kick off the benchmark routine with some CPU-only loads in GeekBench. A single A73 core performance is on par with the new S8 series and very close to the new Kryo 280 cores by Qualcomm.
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Higher is better
But it's the multi-core tests where the four A73 units really shine and show as big potential as the latest Snapdragon and Exynos processors.
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Higher is better
The Kirin 960 choice of graphics, the Mali-G71MP8, is an enormous improvement over the previous generations of HiSilicon chips and is flagship worthy. It performs beautifully on the Honor 9's 1080p screen, and is beaten only by the latest Adreno GPU inside the Mi 6 and OnePlus 5.
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Higher is better
This offscreen test can give you a better understanding of the Mali G71MP8's real power. Unfortunately, the GPU came last among the current flagship crop, though still a worthy contender.
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Higher is better
Still, while looking at the synthetics, real-life gaming is definitely a pleasant experience on the Honor 9.
Higher is better
Moving on to some all-round performance benchmarks, we find that the Honor 9 shines bright in BaseMark OS II tests. It's just a notch behind the top dogs in the chart, mostly attributed to the inferior GPU.
Higher is better
Higher is better
The bad news first - there is GPU performance throttling triggered automatically to prevent overheating. Huawei wasn't that successful in cooling the Honor 9's chipset as it was with the P10. It sure was easier with the all-metal P10, but the large pieces of glass around the Honor 9 left the tiny frame as the only material capable conducting the heat outside the device. The panels won't go unpleasantly hot, but the phone may eventually throttle under pressure.
The good news is, you won't notice this throttling. While the benchmark scores revealed this process, the Honor 9 won't experience hiccups in games. Or even if the phone hits the breaks on the GPU, it's powerful enough for you not to notice what's happening under the hood. And we can live with that.
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