The Samsung Galaxy S8 Active packs the same internal hardware as the proper Galaxy S8 and S8+ models in the US. The Active is equipped with a Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 CPU. This is an octa-core CPU made up of two 4-core Kryo clusters. One is 4x2.35 GHz and the second cluster is 4x1.9 GHz. is paired with an Adreno 540 GPU and 4GB of RAM.
Let us address the elephant on the page. The iPhone 8's new A11 Bionic is really, flipping fast. In fact, some might even argue that it's too much horsepower for a smartphone that should rather be focusing on efficiency. On the other hand, it's the fastest smartphone in the world right now, obliterating the competition - so call it a selling point, if you wish.
Starting off with the single-core tests, the S8 Active scored a bit less than the other competitors. In fact, you'll generally see this trend in this performance section. It feels like the S8 Active was slightly under-clocked since it isn't able to dissipate heat as quickly as a fully glass and metal smartphone. The added poly-carbonate and layers of protection act as a jacket and keeps in more heat than it should.
Anyway, in the single-core test, the S8 Active did okay compared to other Snapdragon 835-powered devices. All three Samsung devices with a Snapdragon 835 CPU scored toward the bottom in this test.
Higher is better
In the multi-core test, The Galaxy S8 Active scored last among all Snapdragon 835 smartphones, just a few points within the Snapdragon-powered Galaxy S8+. This is the third Snapdragon 835-powered Samsung device we're reviewing, and they are pretty much performing about the same.
Higher is better
Antutu 6 is next up and, of course, the iPhone 8 is no stranger to the top of the charts. Following Apple are two very well-optimized Android devices: the OnePlus 5 and the Moto Z2 Force. An interesting trend here can be seen at the bottom of the chart, where Samsung's SD 835 models rank from fastest to slowest: Note8, Galaxy S8+, and then Galaxy S8 Active at the very bottom. Let's keep moving.
Higher is better
Notice how the iPhone 8's super-fast A11 Bionic chip is not in as relatively far ahead as we saw in the previous benchmarks. This goes to show you that benchmarking apps compare phones the same way. The Moto Z2 Force and OnePlus 5 have been neck and neck for the past few benchmarks as well, tying with the iPhone 8, in fact. Exynos chipped devices did about the same or inferior to the Active, how the tables have turned with Basemark OS 2.0.
Higher is better
Basemark X is all about graphics. The iPhone didn't make this chart, but the Exynos powered Galaxy S8 topped it. The Active ranked around the middle among these devices.
Higher is better
Basemark ES 3.1 is based on OpenGL 3.1 and the Galaxy S8 Active scored toward the bottom of the score chart. The iPhones are at the top here, followed by the Exynos-powered Galaxy Note8. When it comes to the well-optimized Moto Z2 Force and OnePlus 5, these guys were beat by other Snapdragon 835 performers.
Higher is better
GFXBench takes graphics performance and is able to compare them on a more level playing field thanks to its offscreen tests, which render at a standardized 1080p resolution. While the Active did well with the 3.0 test, the 3.1 test involved a bit more stuttering at 23 fps. Tying the Active with the Galaxy S8+ for last place. The Nokia 8 did the best with 32 fps.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
The Samsung Galaxy S8 Active performed just as well as the Galaxy S8+ in benchmark test. The phone generally got warm while using it in a covered warehouse in the Florida heat. If you plan on using this phone while working on-site in a high-heat environment or out in the sun, know that it will likely get warm.
The good news is that the phone can actually dissipate heat particularly well. The right edge of the phone warms up pretty uniformly thanks to (presumably) some well-situated heat pipes, pulling heat away from the CPU. That large front glass also aids in cooling the phone down.
Let's move on to telephony, and Samsung's suite of apps.
Tip us
1.9m 150k
RSS
EV
Merch
Log in I forgot my password Sign up