The Mate 40 Pro is the first phone we're seeing with a chipset made on a 5nm process - Apple's A14 may be official, but the handset's haven't shipped yet. The Mate's in-house Kirin 9000 has an integrated 5G modem, and that's a first - Apple's is external.
The Kirin 9000 has the usual CPU core count - 8 of them. In a new development for a Kirin, they're arranged in what's become Qualcomm's configuration of choice for the last two generations of high-end Snapdragons - 1+3+4. So you get one Cortex-A77 core capped at 3.13GHz, three more A77s running at up to 2.54GHz, and four A55s clocked as high as 2.04GHz.
You may note that the Kirin CPU is based on the previous core design, with A78 cores now official and likely to be found in the Exynos SoC for next year, with some derivative of them in the Snapdragon. Since we have neither the Exynos, nor the Snapdragon, however, we can't really compare.
What the Kirin and the Exynos will share is the GPU - Mali G78. We don't know how many cores Samsung will use but the Kirin here has all 24 allowed by Arm's design. However, they are clocked relatively low.
Mate 40 Pros will come in several memory configurations, ours here has 8GB of RAM and 256GB of storage.
As before, the Mate 40 Pro has a Performance mode in the battery settings, which unlock its full potential - otherwise, it's a more modest performer. We tested in both modes, naturally and here come the numbers.
In GeekBench' multi-core CPU test, the Mate 40 Pro in Performance mode outperforms last year's iPhone 11 Pro Max by some 200 points (less than 6%), while the difference from the front-running Snapdragons of 2020 is more like 10%. In the single-core test, the Mate inches ahead of the Zenfone 7 Pro and its S865+, the ROG Phone 3 a bit behind, and the rest about 10-12% down from the Mate. The 11 Pro Max is in a different league in single-core performance, as is normally the case.
Higher is better
Higher is better
The Mate 40 Pro posted the highest results we've seen in Antutu, topping our chart at 686K and change. The Mi 10 Ultra has somehow managed to pass the 600K mark by a lot, though still behind the Mate, while the rest of this year's flagship lineup are at or below 600K.
Higher is better
The Mali-G78 GPU in the Mate 40 Pro posts superb numbers in 3DMark, for both OpenGL and Vulcan based applications - it's a 20-30% advantage over the Snapdragon 865(+) devices of the day. The Mate's numbers do drop after a couple of runs to less extreme levels, but it maintains its lead.
Higher is better
Higher is better
It's much of the same story in GFXBench, where the Mate 40 Pro leads the pack in the offscreen tests yet again.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Rendering for the Mate 40 Pro's high display resolution puts the Kirin 9000 at a slight disadvantage compared to the flagships that come with 1080p screens. That said, it does outperform by a wide margin all 2020 flagships which have 1440p displays.
If you are after the highest possible fps numbers in demanding titles, Huawei gives you the option of switching to one of the lower resolutions, like FHD+, for instance. In 1080p rendering, the Kirin 9000 is unmatched by any other Android device.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Since it's our first encounter with this Kirin 9000, we gave it a bit a harder time than we do for established performers and ran some CPU throttling tests to see how it behaves under sustained load.
So, outside of Performance mode under full load on all 8 CPU cores, the Mate 40 Pro ran at full speed for about two minutes, then dropped to about 50% for a minute, then back to full speed for a minute, until eventually settling for a 1-minute-at-max-2-minutes-at-half pattern until we called it quits 30minutes into the test.
CPU throttling test, regular mode
We let the Mate cool down and flipped the toggle to go into Performance mode. Here, the phone maintained a performance within 8% of its peak numbers for about 22 minutes, at which point it did plummet to the 50% state for a minute, followed by 4 minutes of near-top performance and then back to 50% for a minute. That remained the pattern for about half an hour, followed by 8 minutes of near-peak results before the end of our one-hour test.
CPU throttling test, Performance mode
In any case this much variance in performance is hardly ideal. It would make more sense for the phone to drop to, say, 80% (or whatever is really feasible) of its maximum and then maintain that for as long as needed, as opposed to the peak-and-dip approach Huawei has taken. Then again, the P30 Pro we tested back in the day for a gaming-related article dropped to 60% and maintained that level indefinitely and the Mate 40 Pro way seems better.
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