Just like its bigger C7 sibling, the Galaxy C5 is essentially a mid-range offer. That being said, we don't expect anything mind-blowing in terms of pure number-crunching power. What we are looking for, however, is enough "omph" to power through the list of everyday tasks most users will likely require.
Seeing how even the sub $150 category now typically has the breathing room of an eight-core chip, it should come as no surprise that the Galaxy C5 runs smoothly. Its 4GB of RAM also allow it to punch well above its Galaxy A5 (2016) counterpart it terms of multitasking.
Coming back to the benchmarks themselves, the Galaxy C5 can definitely hold its own against competitors. When we picked the competitions, we put the emphasis on both display size and the price range. The ongoing surge of increasingly better and more tantalizing offers out of China has landed some quite interesting phones on the chart. Handsets like the Xiaomi Mi 5, Meizu Pro 6 or the Huawei Honor 8 definitely punch a whole league above the Galaxy C5 in terms of performance, while still remaining below the $350 mark. Still, the problems with most of these usually lie in availability or after-sales support, so there is a trade-off to consider.
First, we're looking at some all-round benchmarks, like AnTuTu, and we can clearly see the Galaxy C7's Snapdragon 625 is not only more efficient, but also quite a bit more powerful thanks to its higher clock rates.
As for the rest of the Samsung devices we picked up for the chart, the Galaxy J5 (2016) is expectedly lacking behind the C5 with its Snapdragon 410 and 2GB of RAM. That is naturally true about the Galaxy A5 as well, rocking the older Snapdragon 615. Although, the distance is smaller in this particular race. The Galaxy J7 (2016) on the other hand is providing some solid competition across the board.
AnTuTu 6
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 131758
Meizu Pro 6 99195
Huawei Honor 8 94892
Huawei Mate 8 91609
Sony Xperia X 77537
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 76186
Samsung Galaxy C7 62818
Huawei P9 Lite 52768
Huawei Honor 5c 51220
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 49094
Sony Xperia XA 47170
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 45474
Meizu m3 note 44898
Samsung Galaxy C5 44438
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 38359
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 35689
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 27487
Just like we originally thought, Samsung's own Exynos 7870 Octa is pulling strong in most benchmarking aspects and not only tops the Snapdragon 617 in terms of power efficiency, but also in raw power in many of the tests.
It is very hard to definitively point out the superior device in the pair, especially when you throw in the Adreno 405 versus Mali-T830MP2 battle.
Don't get us wrong, we are far from the idea that the J7 (2016) is a superior device overall, but Samsung might have been better off betting on its own 14nm Exynos 7870 Octa in the C5.
Basemark OS II
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 2444
Huawei Mate 8 2033
Huawei Honor 8 2029
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 1914
Meizu Pro 6 1446
Samsung Galaxy C7 1368
OnePlus X 1290
Samsung Galaxy C5 1007
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 999
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 956
Meizu m3 note 930
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 576
Basemark OS 2.0
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 2180
Huawei Honor 8 2099
Huawei Mate 8 2017
Meizu Pro 6 1919
Sony Xperia X 1714
LG Nexus 5X 1591
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 1426
Huawei P9 Lite 1242
Samsung Galaxy C7 1222
Huawei Honor 5c 1221
OnePlus X 1213
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 1018
Sony Xperia XA 1013
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 1007
Meizu m3 note 852
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 833
Samsung Galaxy C5 815
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 729
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 532
The purely CPU-oriented GeekBench clearly shows that the Galaxy J7 (2016) benefits from having all eight of its Cortex-A53 cores maxing out at 1.6GHz. This is a just one of the perks of using a superior chip fabrication process. And sure, the performance boost isn't mind-blowing in real-life scenarios, but synthetics, especially with multi-threaded loads show a significant difference. The very same logic applies to the Galaxy C7 with its 2.0 GHz cap as well.
GeekBench 3 (multi-core)
Higher is better
Meizu Pro 6 6427
Huawei Honor 8 6380
Huawei Mate 8 6323
Xiaomi Mi 5 5358
Samsung Galaxy C7 5103
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 4537
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 4140
Huawei Honor 5c 3933
Huawei P9 Lite 3799
Sony Xperia X 3796
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 3695
LG Nexus 5X 3527
Samsung Galaxy C5 3083
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 3061
Meizu m3 note 3028
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 2745
OnePlus X 2297
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 1437
GeekBench 3 (single-core)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 2305
Meizu Pro 6 1905
Huawei Honor 8 1831
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 1543
Sony Xperia X 1367
Samsung Galaxy C7 933
Huawei P9 Lite 899
Huawei Honor 5c 898
Meizu m3 note 807
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 745
Samsung Galaxy C5 695
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 628
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 471
Moving on to graphics, the Adreno 405 bundled with the Snapdragon 617 provides adequate graphics performance. It will easily power through most every casual game in the Google Play Store. As for the aforementioned comparison to the Mali-T830MP2 inside the Galaxy J7 (2016), well, it's a mixed bag. We will let you decide for yourself, but will note that since the latter has a 720p display at its disposal, only the off-screen tests offer an equal measuring basis.
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 45
Meizu Pro 6 18
Huawei Honor 8 18
Huawei Mate 8 18
LG Nexus 5X 16
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 14
Sony Xperia X 14
OnePlus X 9.9
Samsung Galaxy C7 9.8
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 8.5
Huawei Honor 5c 7.8
Huawei P9 Lite 7.8
Sony Xperia XA 7.2
Samsung Galaxy C5 6.4
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 5.7
Meizu m3 note 5.4
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 4.9
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 4.2
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 1.8
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 43
Huawei Honor 8 19
Meizu Pro 6 18
Huawei Mate 8 18
LG Nexus 5X 17
Sony Xperia X 15
Sony Xperia XA 15
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 14
OnePlus X 10
Samsung Galaxy C7 9.6
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 9.5
Huawei Honor 5c 8.3
Huawei P9 Lite 8.3
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 7.9
Samsung Galaxy C5 6.3
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 5.7
Meizu m3 note 5.4
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 4.2
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 3.8
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 30
Meizu Pro 6 11
LG Nexus 5X 11
Huawei Honor 8 10
Huawei Mate 8 10
Sony Xperia X 9.2
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 9
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 7.2
Samsung Galaxy C7 6.2
Sony Xperia XA 4.8
Huawei P9 Lite 4.6
Huawei Honor 5c 4.5
Samsung Galaxy C5 4.2
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 4
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 2.6
Meizu m3 note 2.5
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 29
Meizu Pro 6 11
Huawei Honor 8 11
Huawei Mate 8 11
Sony Xperia XA 11
LG Nexus 5X 11
Sony Xperia X 10
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 9
Samsung Galaxy C7 6.1
Huawei P9 Lite 4.9
Huawei Honor 5c 4.8
Samsung Galaxy C5 4.1
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 3.9
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 3.2
Meizu m3 note 2.5
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 2.1
Also, the J7 (2016) didn't manage to run the most intensive OpenGL ES 3.1 Car benchmark. But, then again, running it a 2.6 frames is hardly an achievement for the Snapdragon 617 in real-life terms either. But still, it's commendable that the Adreno GPU even supports OpenGL ES 3.1.
GFX 3.1 Car scene (offscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 17
Meizu Pro 6 6.4
Huawei Honor 8 6.3
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 5.3
Sony Xperia X 5.3
Samsung Galaxy C7 3.4
Huawei P9 Lite 2.8
Huawei Honor 5c 2.7
Samsung Galaxy C5 2.6
Sony Xperia XA 2.5
GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 17
Huawei Honor 8 6.9
Meizu Pro 6 6.4
Sony Xperia X 5.9
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 5.5
Sony Xperia XA 5.4
Samsung Galaxy C7 3.4
Huawei Honor 5c 3
Huawei P9 Lite 3
Samsung Galaxy C5 2.6
Finally, there is Basemark X, which should provide a better overview of where the Galaxy C5 stands graphics performance-wise among its competitors.
Basemark X
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 33110
LG Nexus 5X 16609
Huawei Honor 8 16592
Huawei Mate 8 15593
Meizu Pro 6 15209
Sony Xperia X 15087
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 14717
OnePlus X 10572
Samsung Galaxy C7 10445
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 8540
Huawei Honor 5c 7735
Huawei P9 Lite 7681
Sony Xperia XA 6420
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 5383
Samsung Galaxy C5 5039
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016) 4947
Meizu m3 note 4567
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 4072
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 2180
Basemark X (medium)
Higher is better
Xiaomi Mi 5 35292
Huawei Honor 8 28832
Huawei Mate 8 27425
Sony Xperia X 24687
Meizu Pro 6 23774
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (S650) 23643
Samsung Galaxy C7 21164
Huawei Honor 5c 16171
Huawei P9 Lite 15754
Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (Helio X10) 15359
Sony Xperia XA 14635
Meizu m3 note 11604
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) 11199
Samsung Galaxy C5 9598
Lenovo Vibe K4 Note 8403
Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016) 4157
All things considered, the Samsung Galaxy C5 may not have the top-tier specs to impress, but it won't let down even power users. Of course, don't expect quite the same impressive punch its bigger C7 sibling delivers with peek clocks in the high 2.0 GHz range. But other than that, you still get the benefit of 4GB of RAM, so you can multitask to your heart's content. The sole fact that Samsung feels confident enough to include its full-featured multi-window working environment on to the handset is plenty of proof that the C5 won't leave you hanging whatever the situation.
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