The Xperia 10 V ships with the latest Android 13 with minimal Sony customization on top. In typical Sony fashion, the look and feel are very AOSP, with just a pinch of extras, which you typically have to dig a bit deeper to uncover.
The number of pre-installed apps on the Xperia 10 V is really small. The phone handily asks you if you want to install some basics from a curated list during the setup process. No bloat, just genuinely useful suggestions, as far as we can tell.
Starting with the basics, we find out that some of them are actually missing - like Ambient display (Google's name for an always-on display feature). This was the case with the previous generation Xperia 10 IV as well. For some reason, Sony reserves this feature for its higher-end devices, even though the Xperia 10 V also has an OLED display.
The lockscreen brings no surprises and features a clock (that you can customize), a shortcut to the camera and another one for Google Assistant. The homescreen, too, is as standard as they come. The Google feed is the leftmost pane, but you can disable it if it's not your thing. The quick toggles/notification area is Google's stock, too.
The style of choice features oversized buttons. The improved widget interface from Android 12 is still present here as well.
Lockscreen • Homescreen • Folder view • App drawer • Notification shade • Widgets
One of the Sony exclusives, which deserves mention even though it's not new, is the Multi-window switch. You can access it from the task switcher or from the dedicated Multi-window manager shortcut icon on the homescreen (which technically sums up Side sense, it's all a bit intertwined). You get sort of like two stacked task switcher rolodexes with your currently opened apps to pick one for the top half and one for the bottom half of the screen. Each half's rightmost and leftmost pane lets you launch another app, not just pick from the already running ones.
The phone remembers three previously used pairs so that you can access them directly, though we couldn't find a way to save custom app pair presets. It's worth mentioning that the window split can be done in almost any arbitrary ratio, not just 50/50.
Task switcher • Multi-window switcher
If multi-window does not provide enough multitasking potential for you, there is always pop-up window. It does only work on supported apps, but most are already on that list.
Side sense is another of the in-house Sony features. A handle on the side of the phone opens up a menu of shortcuts to apps and features, most of them user-configurable. The 21:9 multi-window pairs can be customized here, but they don't go into the three-pair shortcuts in the regular task switcher. A recent addition to the menu is a widget to control the Sony headphones app - handy if you have a set of those.
There's a fairly standard set of gestures for call handling, as well as a one-handed mode and smart backlight control. In this menu, you'll find the navigation options with the two basic types available - gestures or a navbar.
Similarly to previous generations, the Game Enhancer utility is missing on the Xperia 10 V. Sony's Music player is on board, though, while Google's Photos and Files are used for gallery and file management purposes.
Sony Music • Google Photos • Google Files
There is no point beating about the bush - the Xperia 10 V is pretty deficient in the performance department. Sony is carrying forward the same silicon for a third year in a row. Like its predecessor, the Xperia 10 V uses the Snapdragon 695 chipset. Before that, the Xperia 10 III used the Snapdragon 690, which is essentially the same chip with a slightly lower max speed on its "big" cores and the ability to capture 4K video, which the Snapdragon 695 lacks.
Yes, you read that right, it's a year later, and we still have to criticize Sony for going with a midrange chipset that does not support 4K video capture. At least the Snapdragon 695 is a fairly efficient 5G-capable chip (6nm), as we already saw with the excellent battery score of the Xperia 10 V.
It has a 2x2.2 GHz Kryo 660 Gold & 6x1.7 GHz Kryo 660 Silver CPU configuration, plus an Adreno 619 GPU - nether is particularly impressive, especially in 2023. The Xperia 10 V comes in a single 6GB RAM and 128GB expandable storage configuration. That's what we tested as well.
Let's start with GeekBench and its CPU tests. We can clearly see that the Xperia 10 V hasn't improved compared to the Xperia IV with the same chipset and even the Xperia 10 III with its Snapdragon 690. The Snapdragon 695 is only slightly more powerful in CPU tasks than the MediaTek Helio G99 and trades blows with the Snapdragon 4 Gen 1 - a chipset that is technically in a lower performance class but simply has the benefit of being much newer and more modern.
Higher is better
Higher is better
AnTuTu isn't particularly kind to the Xperia 10 V. It manages to score closer to the Xperia 10 III and the Redmi Note 12 5G and Realme 10, with their Snapdragon 4 Gen 1 and Helio G99, respectively, than the Xperia 10 IV and Realme 10 Pro, both running the same Snapdragon 695 chipset.
This effectively means that either the Xperia 10 V is not making full use of the performance the Snapdragon 695 has to offer or some other parts of the performance chain, like RAM and storage, are misbehaving, or alternatively, there is some software issue. Hopefully, this gets resolved via an update, and we get at least proper Snapdragon 695 performance levels.
Higher is better
At least the Adreno 619 GPU inside the Xperia 10 V performs as expected. That is to say better than the Helio G99 and its Mali-G57 MC2 but worse than the Dimensity 1080 and the Mali-G68 MC4.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Lowering the difficulty of the GFXBench tests doesn't change the overall picture too much. The Dimensity 1080 does gain a more substantial lead in raw fps numbers.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
3DMark generally offers a clearer, more legible picture of relative performance across different devices with its offscreen tests. Going by its numbers, the Xperia 10 V and its Snapdragon 695 are pretty similar in graphics performance to the Dimensity 700 and the Helio G99.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Things aren't looking particularly good for the Xperia 10 V in the performance department. At least the phone runs pretty cool to the touch. Initially, we thought that this meant it had great thermal management, and a 3DMark stress test even collaborated with that theory. However, it turns out that with a long enough stress test, the Xperia 10 V reveals some pretty lackluster thermal management. The kind that sees the chipset rapidly dip in performance, which might cause a stutter in-game, only to then ease up and ramp performance up, just to repeat the process seconds later. That's the worst kind of thermal management you can generally have.
We are pretty disappointed with the overall performance profile of the Xperia 10 V. The Snapdragon 695 was never a great chipset and is starting to show its age. Plus, in practical terms, the Xperia 10 V doesn't even run its UI smoothly and suffers from slowdowns and stutters. We really think Sony dropped the ball by not moving the Xperia 10 V to a more potent chipset.
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