HTC 10 hands-on: First play

First play

GSMArena team, 12 April, 2016.

Software

HTC has rethought the way it does software with the latest Sense. It's easier to adapt to users' needs and it's also leaner.

The HTC 10 UI can be customized with one of the thousands of available themes, and you can create your own by mixing and matching parts you like or just using a photo as a base.

Latest HTC Sense offers many themes and free-form layout on the homescreen - HTC 10 hands-on Latest HTC Sense offers many themes and free-form layout on the homescreen - HTC 10 hands-on
Latest HTC Sense offers many themes and free-form layout on the homescreen - HTC 10 hands-on Latest HTC Sense offers many themes and free-form layout on the homescreen - HTC 10 hands-on
Latest HTC Sense offers many themes and free-form layout on the homescreen

The "Freestyle Layout" does away with the familiar grid of icons and lets you place each icon, widget, and even stickers wherever you please, even overlapping each other. Hey, your desk is messy, why not your homescreen?

Homescreen and app drawer - HTC 10 hands-on Homescreen and app drawer - HTC 10 hands-on Homescreen and app drawer - HTC 10 hands-on
Homescreen and app drawer

Something we appreciate is that HTC looked at the app package and removed duplicates by picking the best app for each function, whether it was an HTC-made app or it comes from the standard Google package. Google's apps have significantly improved in quality recently, but some maker apps still offer additional features.

You'd think that having fewer apps will use less storage, but on the 32GB phone you get about 23GB available (and 52GB on the 64GB version).

Anyway, the streamlining continues with a secret auto-optimization algorithm that launches apps twice as fast as the One M9. Boost+ helps by limiting power use by background apps and balancing performance and power draw for games.

Notification area and settings - HTC 10 hands-on Notification area and settings - HTC 10 hands-on Notification area and settings - HTC 10 hands-on
Notification area and settings

The fingerprint reader can secure the lockscreen, obviously, but App Lock gives you finer-grained control by letting you lock individual apps. The fingerprint reader needs just 0.2 seconds to do its job.

By the way, HTC has improved the responsiveness of the touchscreen by as much as 50% compared to the One M9. This makes the HTC 10 more adept in tracking your finger across the screen.

Benchmarks

HTC 10 is powered by the latest Qualcomm chipset - the Snapdragon 820. It has a quad-core Kryo processor by Qualcomm design, an Adreno 530 GPU, and 4GB of RAM. Naturally, the processor allows two Kryo cores to tick at 2.15GHz and the other pair to work at 1.6GHz.

We've already seen the Snapdragon in action within the Xiaomi Mi 5 and the LG G5, and we know it performs great. Regardless of the screen resolution used (1080p or a 1440p), the S820 chip delivers flagship performance.

Yesterday, at the HTC 10 announcement, we didn't have enough time to run some tests, but now that we have the device at our disposal, we ran all sorts of benchmarks.

Indeed, a single Kryo core is a beast, and currently it's one of the best solutions on the market together with Apple's Twister CPU. The single-core performance is crucial for smooth OS operations, and the Kryo cores are up to the task.

GeekBench 3 (single-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 6s
    2542
  • HTC 10
    2368
  • LG G5
    2328
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    2305
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    2170
  • Huawei P9
    1819
  • Samsung Galaxy S6
    1490

The multi-core score isn't as impressive, because there are four Kryo cores inside the Snapdragon 820, while the Kirin 955 in Huawei P9, or the Exynos chip inside the Galaxy S7 feature octa-core processors. Still, considering the number of cores, we could easily consider those points as an excellent grade.

GeekBench 3 (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Huawei P9
    6558
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    6360
  • LG G5
    5362
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    5358
  • HTC 10
    5257
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    4427
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    4017
  • HTC One M9
    3761
  • HTC One (M8) Lollipop
    2923

The HTC 10 easily aced the AnTuTu 6, and it bested the rest of its siblings by a huge margin. Since the HTC 10 has similar hardware to the LG G5, we guess some software optimizations are the reason for the great performance.

AnTuTu 6

Higher is better

  • HTC 10
    154031
  • LG G5
    134541
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    132084
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    131758
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    129990
  • Huawei P9
    98069
  • HTC One M9
    73021

The BaseMark OS II compound bench outed an oddly low score, which makes us believe there might be some problem with the app itself and the new Sense UI. We'll redo this test when possible.

Basemark OS 2.0

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 6s
    2195
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    2180
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    2128
  • Huawei P9
    2068
  • LG G5
    2065
  • HTC 10
    1839
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    1482
  • HTC One M9
    1365
  • HTC One (M8) Lollipop
    1186

HTC 10 uses the latest Adreno 530, which is the best GPU on the market right now. The offscreen GPU benchmarks below prove that.

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • HTC 10
    47
  • LG G5
    47
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    45
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    39.5
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    38
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    24
  • HTC One M9
    23
  • Huawei P9
    18
  • HTC One (M8) Lollipop
    12

GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • HTC 10
    31
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    30
  • LG G5
    30
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    28
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    18
  • Huawei P9
    10

GFX 3.1 Car scene (offscreen)

Higher is better

  • HTC 10
    18
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    17
  • LG G5
    16
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    15
  • Huawei P9
    6.5

Running the GPU test on the native 1440p resolution takes a serious toll on framerates, but they remain flagship-grade. The Mi 5, which has the same GPU but runs on 1080p, expectedly does better here.

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 6s
    53.6
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    43
  • HTC 10
    28
  • LG G5
    28
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    27
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    25
  • HTC One M9
    24
  • Huawei P9
    19
  • HTC One (M8) Lollipop
    13

GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    29
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    19
  • HTC 10
    15
  • LG G5
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    15
  • Huawei P9
    11

GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    17
  • HTC 10
    9.9
  • LG G5
    8.8
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    7.9
  • Huawei P9
    7.1

In the BaseMark X GPU test the HTC 10 scores on par with its chipset sibling - the LG G5.

Basemark X

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    33110
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    32345
  • LG G5
    29456
  • HTC 10
    28882
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    23923
  • HTC One M9
    19848
  • Huawei P9
    16942
  • HTC One (M8) Lollipop
    12257

The HTC 10 scores speak for themselves - the new flagship delivers a stellar performance, and we expected nothing less from a Snapdragon 820 smartphone. The chip is sure to serve the HTC 10 hassle-free for the years to come.

Reader comments

  • AnonD-477406
  • 03 May 2016
  • Qgx

I believe you're vaguely attempting to mock me, but your grammar and syntax is terrible enough that I can't be certain. That would be extremely ironic, if you tried to mock my English with terrible English. By the way, a President is impeached, not...

  • Davood
  • 02 May 2016
  • mUK

And who says only SONY devices all look the same? Look at this new HTC10 don't you think there's no innovation in the design in years

  • AnonD-531820
  • 30 Apr 2016
  • n59

The S6 edge is an awful phone, truly horrible. Went with the reviews after 5 generations of HTC's last being the M7 (awesome) and so wish I hadnt,arse about tit phone, I just want to press one button and take a bleeding picture,sold after 2 months o...