The Xperia 10 Plus boots Android Pie, and it's a slightly more Google-ish variation than the one we saw on the Xperia XZ3 last year. What we mean is that now you can have the pill navigation (which Sony calls 'Swipe up on Home button') in addition to the classic nav bar. You can find the setting in the display menu, and enabling it makes the 10 Plus behave almost precisely like a Pixel phone.
Swipe up setting • Homescreen • App drawer • Folder view • Notification shade
There are unique Xperia bits on top, however - ones that are meant to help out with the tall aspect of the display and the extreme overall height, particularly on this larger 6.5-inch model (the 6-inch Xperia 10 non-Plus is naturally easier to operate). Chief among those is one-handed mode.
It's not a new thing, it's just that being able to shrink the UI and bring it closer gets a new meaning on a phone of the 10 Plus's proportions. A quick double tap on the Home button does just that and even makes the notification shade almost conveniently reachable with one hand - good luck with that on the full-screen UI.
Then there's Side Sense - a custom drawer-like interface that can be triggered by tapping twice on a handle located on the side of the screen. You can move the handle up and down, adjust its size, and have it on either side or both sides. The menu itself is sort of a take on the Android Pie recent apps interface, which is notably missing from its intended location as a row in the app drawer.
Side sense on the XZ3, where it debuted, was a bit more powerful and for example, you could use it to take a picture when in the camera app. This functionality is gone now, but in all fairness, it's unlikely to be missed. You can, however, disable the handle from showing up over apps on a per-app basis.
An inherent benefit of an extra long display is the ability to show more items in long lists - that includes boring stuff like the settings menu, and marginally more fun stuff like, say, Instagram.
Another good use for a 21:9 screen is showing two apps in two larger-than-average halves of the said screen - if only Google hadn't completely ruined the mechanics of going into multi-window with Pie.
There's a downside to the unusual aspect too, in that some apps may not be able to display properly in it. We ran into this with one of the benchmarks we do, but not the more common apps you're likely to use. Even so, the possibility for incompatibility is there.
Settings (almost all of them) • Instagram (1 extra row) • Multi- window • and in landscape • Incompatible app
Sony also notably handles its own multimedia display and playback. Album features both photo and video support, can connect to the cloud and local network services and is pretty good at organizing galleries and doing the occasional light edit on a shot.
The Music app is simple and well organized, without lacking any important features. All the while, it looks very appealing with large format album art (and automatic art download) and a flat design. It also features Google cloud integration. There are also various options to tweak sound including the DSEE HX up-scaler and the Automatic optimization which work with wired headphones. Others, like aptX HD, are compatible with Bluetooth devices.
Album app • Photo Editor • Music app • Audio settings
The Xperia 10 Plus gets its computing power from a Snapdragon 636 chipset - a fairly popular solution in the midrange. However, for the 'super mid-range' that Sony wants to call the 10 Plus's market position, a 660 or even a 710 would have been a much better fit. It's not that the 636 is a bad SoC, there's just not much 'super' about it. The handset is equipped with 4GB of RAM for most of the world and 6GB in China. We have a non-China 4GB version for testing.
Starting out our benchmarking routing with GeekBench, we're witnessing a predictable performance from the Xperia with single-core results within single digits of competitors with the same internals. The 10 Plus is significantly more powerful under single-core loads than S630 phones (last year's XA2 Ultra and XA2 Plus) but lags behind Snapdragon 660 devices and the Kirin 710-packing Honor 8X. The Xiaomi Mi 8 SE excels in this test with its Snapdragon 710 posting a 40% higher score than the Xperia - now that's super midrange.
Higher is better
A similar distribution of powers can be observed in the multi-core test only here the Oppo F11 Pro with its Mediatek Helio P70 takes the lead ahead of the S710-powered Mi 8 SE. The Xperia is again towards the lower end of the pack, though it is still a step up from last year's models, if that's the way you prefer to look at it.
Higher is better
Over in Antutu, the Xperia 10 Plus posts one of the better scores for its chipset configuration, so that's got to count for something. It's still no match for the higher-end Snapdragons that can be found for the money.
Higher is better
Graphics performance is another area where the Xperia shows its weakness compared to better-equipped rivals. Thanks to the more it needs to render, it's even lagging behind last year's models with the 630 chipset in onscreen benchmarks. If you're into heavy gaming, you'd be better off looking for a Snapdragon 660 or 710 powered phone.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
On a positive note, the Xperia 10 Plus showed no signs of overheating, only slightly warming up after repeated benchmark runs. Throttling wasn't an issue either and results only varied slightly between runs. Overall, the phone is a good daily performer, but there are better options for more demanding mobile gaming.
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