Just like the P10, the P10 Plus utilizes the top of the line Kirin 960 SoC. It is developed in-house by Huawei's chipmaker HiSilicon and has been around for some time now, originally making its debut on the Huawei Mate 9. Even with a few months of history behind it, the Kirin 960 is still one of the most innovative and cutting-edge chips around.
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 also promising improved performance.
Four A73 cores are currently one of the most potent combinations available, at least until the likes of the Snapdragon 835 and Exynos 8895 officially arrive on the scene. However, there is still a sea of great flagship offers out there that can outshine the P10 and P10 Plus in some respects. When picking the competition, we didn't really have to hold back, since the price of EUR 750 leaves very few current smartphone offers out of budget. Then again, you could go down a more economic route as well, so our first order of business was to draft in the OnePlus 3T and ZTE Axon 7 - the value offers in an aggressive pricing category of their own.
Then again, you don't really need to limit yourself to the pair. Proper western-friendly flagships like the Samsung Galaxy S7 edge or the LG V20 can also be had for less then EUR 700. The brand new LG G6 should be joining their ranks pretty soon as well. We also included the iPhone 7 Plus in the race, since it mostly fits the budget. However, the Pixel XL we threw in for fun and because of its solid camera reputation. In reality, it goes for an even more exuberant price than the P10 Plus.
No proper performance comparison would be complete without throwing in a few of Xiaomi's excellent offers. There are definitely models to consider in the flagship realm - the Mi 5S Plus instantly springs to mid with its dual-camera setup. And if the late Galaxy Note7's aesthetic appealed to you, the Mi Note 2 is definitely worth looking into (we're not saying anything). Even the extravagant 6.5-inch Mi Mix is within reach. Just keep in mind the potential shipping costs and import taxes.
Last, but not least, we included a few of Huawei's other devices. Of course, there are the Mate 9, 9 Pro and smaller P10 - equipped with the same Kirin 960 chip. But, looking back a bit, there is the still excellent P9 Plus with the Kirin 955 and Honor 8, with the Kirin 950 - a nice historic overview of the performance bumps in HiSilicon's hardware.
We kick things off with some CPU-only loads in GeekBench. Indeed, a single A73 core is better than any other available processor we've tested so far under Android, but Apple's Hurricane cores still trump everything else.
Higher is better
But it's multi-core tests where the four A73 units really shine. It is interesting to note that the P10 Plus seems to come in last in our Kirin 960 lineup - a good 200 points behind the regular P10. That can likely be attributed to early software on our review unit.
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 finally flagship worthy. It managed to perform beautifully on the regular P10. However, on the P10 Plus it is tasked with pushing pixels on a QHD panel. That explains the major performance delta between it and the P10 in on-screen rendering.
Still, while looking at the synthetics, bear in mind that most games will scale back gracefully in both resolution and detail, if necessary. Real-life gaming is definitely a pleasant experience on the P10 Plus.
Higher is better
Before continuing on to GFXBench, we do feel obliged to note that while the Mali-G71MP8 on the Kirin 960 chip is powerful, it is not exactly power-efficient. There are no two ways about it, the GPU is just a bit on the power-hungry side. This sadly has two negative consequences. One is a noticeable dip in battery endurance while under GPU load. More than what is expected on most other devices, that is.
The second problem is heat. The chip runs hot and appears to thermal-throttle under prolonged stress. The regular P10 has the same problem, but unlike its case where the performance dips as much as 30%, the P10 Plus seems to have better thermal dissipation with its larger body and the performance drops only by 20% when hot.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Again, keep in mind the QHD panel in the following on-screen tests.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Moving on to some all-round performance benchmarks, we find that the P10 Plus shines bright in BaseMark OS II. It pretty much outpaces all other Android devices currently in our database, including the P10.
Higher is better
Higher is better
AnTuTu appears to show a different story. However, it's nothing really unexpected, since Huawei handsets typically get penalized in this particular benchmark for some reason. That being said, the P10 Plus falls in line perfectly with its expected performance.
Higher is better
The Huawei P10 Plus stands tall in the performance race - nothing short of a proper flagship offer. We really couldn't ask for anything more in the CPU department. As for the GPU, frankly, even the thermal throttling isn't a big deal and definitely not a deal-breaker. Even with it, the Mali-G71MP8 happily chewed through any graphics task we threw at it.
Even under heavy synthetic loads, the P10 Plus never actually got unpleasantly hot to the touch. So, even serious mobile gamers should be safe on long sessions. Chances are, you'll never spot these hurdles under normal circumstances, but they are still worth noting.
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