With a shortage of new Snapdragons, most companies opted for the Snapdragon 821 for their flagship. The HTC U Ultra is one of those phones, along the likes of LG G6, Xperia XZs and a few others.
The 821 is a solid chip, but it provides only a minor advantage over the 820, which powered early 2016 flagships. But again, HTC is not alone in this, only companies with their own chipset manufacturing arms can sidestep Qualcomm's supply issues.
And those companies - Apple, Samsung, Huawei - top the charts in Geekbench 4, both single and multi-core, as well as Basemark OS 2.0.
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What's Snapdragon 821 and what makes it different from the 820, anyway? Glad you asked. Both are based on Qualcomm's custom Kryo cores, four of them grouped in pairs in a big.LITTLE setup. In Snapdragon 821, the cores have improvements that allow them to stay at full throttle longer.
It's important to note that there are two variants of the 821 chip. The one marked AB, that is the one used by the HTC U Ultra and Google Pixel XL, runs at the same clock speed as the older Snapdragon 820 with the goal of providing longer battery life without any compromises with the S820-level performance. The non-AB version has a 0.2GHz boost to the two "big" cores and a small bump to GPU speed with the goal of providing improved performance while keeping the S820-level battery life.
For those reasons, the older Snapdragon 820 inside the LG V20 can be competitive in AnTuTu 6. However, in this test, the HTC U Ultra way outperforms the Huawei Mate 9, which uses the Kirin 960 chipset. It uses Cortex-A73 cores, which serve as the basis for the new Kryo cores found in the Snapdragon 835 chipset.
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Without the GPU speed boost, we expect the U Ultra to show a similar 3D performance as S820 phones. However, on a few occasions, it even lagged behind a touch.
Offscreen tests show raw performance and here the HTC U Ultra often came behind Snapdragon 820 phones like the LG V20 or the ZTE Axon 7. Even the S821 AB chip in the Pixel XL managed to get ahead.
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On-screen performance can vary, you can use the Boost+ app to reduce the resolution for troublesome games and have them run much faster.
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Basemark X thinks highly of the HTC U Ultra, while the Basemark ES 3.1 is not particularly impressed. This goes to show you that the game's engine can have a great impact on performance.
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Higher is better
Higher is better
The HTC U Ultra is definitely fast enough to serve its flagship duties, though it is not the fastest phone you can buy currently (let alone in the next couple of months). We are at least grateful that HTC didn't pull another 10 evo and resurrect an outdated chipset. Still, for the price that HTC is charging, we think it could have went up to the faster version of Snapdragon 821.
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