Samsung Galaxy S10+ hits GeekBench again, Exynos 9820 scores improving

George, 04 February 2019

The Samsung Galaxy S10's launch day is nearing and a quick search in our news section will tell you that a lot of info on it (or, rather, the three of them) has already come to light. Until we get to hold one in our hands, however, every extra detail is welcome and the latest bit is a GeekBench score of the Exynos 9820 version of the S10+.

It's not the first GeekBench listing to come out, you'll quickly note - there was the initial one of a Snapdragon S10+ and then an Exynos S10 was also spotted a couple of weeks ago. This latest entry shows improved performance, however, which is only natural as the software is approaching its final state.

GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS Max
    11432
  • Samsung Galaxy S10+ (E9820)
    10387
  • Samsung Galaxy S10+ (S855)
    10256
  • Huawei Mate 20
    9793
  • Huawei Mate 20 Pro
    9712
  • Samsung Galaxy S10 (E9820)
    9570
  • Xiaomi Mi Mix 3
    9065
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    9026
  • OnePlus 6T McLaren Edition
    9005
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    8883

A quick comparison shows that this S10+ posts some 9% better multi-core results than the S10 before it. This lets the Exynos version not only catch up with the Snapdragon one, but even pass it by about 100pts - a generally meaningless difference, but one that will please Exynos fans.

The Exynos version was already significantly more powerful in the single-core test than the Snapdragon one, but the latest result is also ever so slightly better too.

GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS Max
    4777
  • Samsung Galaxy S10+ (E9820)
    4472
  • Samsung Galaxy S10 (E9820)
    4382
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    3771
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    3642
  • Samsung Galaxy S10+ (S855)
    3413
  • Huawei Mate 20 Pro
    3291
  • Huawei Mate 20
    3284
  • Xiaomi Mi Mix 3
    2429
  • OnePlus 6T McLaren Edition
    2376

With so little time left until the Galaxy S10 goes official, we can expect that these results will be the ones we'd get out of final units. Even so, it wouldn't hurt to wait a few more weeks before passing judgment.

Source | Via


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Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 30 Jun 2019
  • r3a

😆😆😆 Samsung knows they can't compete in their chipset offerings. They just suck!!. Nothing can change that

Looks like the Snapdragon 855 performs slightly better in multicore and not quite as good in singlecore Geekbench. But both are close to each other as long as they thermally throttle ever. Summer usage is the determining factor!

  • Anonymous
  • 18 Feb 2019
  • MAI

That's only because of the release of the new iPhone X at the end of 2017 which has helped Apple acquire people's interest in their devices... for now.

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