Samsung's fresh new S10 lineup is once again powered by the best the industry can offer - the Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 or Samsung's in-house Exynos 9820 chipset, depending on the market.
We typically get Exynos in our neck of the woods, and so is our S10 review unit. The 8nm chip's CPU is in a 2+2+4 configuration with two big Mongoose M4 cores clocked at 2.7 GHz, two Cortex-A75 cores ticking at 2.4 GHz, and 4 Cortex-A55 cores runninsg at 1.9 GHz for less demanding applications. The GPU is Mali-G76 MP12. Unlike the S10+ which can be had with 8GB or 12GB of RAM, the S10 only comes with 8GB.
As we established in the S10+ review, the M4 cores of the Exynos CPU offer the highest per-core performance in the Android world, still a little short of the iPhone XS' Vortex. The Snapdragon 855's Kryo Gold in the Mi 9 and the standard Cortex-A76 in the Mates' Kirins can't quite keep up.
Higher is better
The Snapdragon snaps back in the multi-core test, where the Mi 9 takes the lead - the S10 is on par with the Mate 20 pair in multi-core loads, but none can match the Mi 9.
Higher is better
In Antutu, the S10 scores a notch below the S10+, but some 10% more than the Mate 20 and the Snapdragon 845 devices of last year. The Mi 9 is well ahead, however, even beating the iPhone XS (yes, yes, cross-platform benchmarking isn't a reliable source of data for performance comparisons).
Higher is better
In the offscreen graphics tests in GFXBench the Mi 9 and S10 pair post largely the same fps numbers, securing a healthy lead to the tune of 20% over the S845 devices and about 30% more than the Kirin 980s.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Onscreen tests put a heavier strain on the Mali in the higher-res Galaxy than the 1080p display of the Mi 9 exerts on the Adreno inside it. Hence, the fps scores are significantly higher on the Snapdragon device than what the S10+ and S10 can output.
Higher is better
Higher is better
The Exynos Galaxy S10 and S10+ perform to a very high standard, delivering the highest single-core CPU results among fellow droids and demonstrate similar raw graphics power to what we got out of the only S855 device we've tested so far. It will be interesting to see how Galaxy S10/S10+ units with the Snapdragon SoC compare to their Exynos stablemates, and we'll be sure to check that when we get a chance.
On the S10, much like on the S10+, we observed significant heat build up under sustained load with the throttling that comes with it - a 10% drop in Antutu scores after 6 runs and no more in subsequent runs. The entire device becomes warm, which means it's dissipating heat efficiently, but also that it's generating a lot of it. Again, we're eager to compare against a S855 version.
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