LG V40 ThinQ hands-on review

GSMArena team, 03 October 2018.

LG's usual stuff on top of Android 8.1

The V40 ThinQ boots Android 8.1 Oreo with LG's in-house launcher on top. Sadly, gone are the days of the V20 which was at the time the first phone to launch on Nougat. It is what it is. Anyway, the V40's user interface is basically identical to that of the G7 - colorful icons, white menus, the proprietary Smart Bulletin - it's all here.

User interface: Lockscreen - LG V40 Thinq Hands On review User interface: Homescreen - LG V40 Thinq Hands On review User interface: .. and another one - LG V40 Thinq Hands On review User interface: Quick toggles - LG V40 Thinq Hands On review User interface: Task switcher - LG V40 Thinq Hands On review
User interface: Lockscreen • Homescreen • .. and another one • Quick toggles • Task switcher

Synthetic benchmarks

The V40 ThinQ is powered by the Snapdragon 845 - aside from custom SoCs from Samsung and Huawei, that's the norm for Android flagships this year. The test unit we have has 6GB of RAM and 64GB of storage. There were hardly any surprises with the benchmark scores, but you can see the numbers we got out of the V40 below.

GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS
    11472
  • vivo NEX S
    9160
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    9026
  • OnePlus 6
    9011
  • Xiaomi Pocophone F1
    9003
  • HTC U12+
    9001
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    8883
  • LG G7 ThinQ
    8865
  • LG V40 ThinQ
    8769
  • Sony Xperia XZ3
    8607
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
    8494
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon)
    8349
  • Oppo Find X
    8018
  • Huawei P20 Pro
    6679
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
    6428
  • LG V30
    6365
  • Google Pixel 2 XL (Android 9)
    6055

GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS
    4823
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    3771
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    3642
  • Sony Xperia XZ3
    2486
  • vivo NEX S
    2466
  • HTC U12+
    2456
  • OnePlus 6
    2450
  • Xiaomi Pocophone F1
    2438
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
    2431
  • LG V40 ThinQ
    2425
  • LG G7 ThinQ
    2395
  • Oppo Find X
    2322
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon)
    2199
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
    1915
  • Huawei P20 Pro
    1907
  • LG V30
    1901
  • Google Pixel 2 XL (Android 9)
    1807

GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS
    47
  • vivo NEX S
    34
  • OnePlus 6
    33
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
    33
  • Xiaomi Pocophone F1
    31
  • Oppo Find X
    28
  • Huawei P20 Pro
    21
  • HTC U12+
    20
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon)
    20
  • Sony Xperia XZ3
    19
  • LG G7 ThinQ
    18
  • LG V40 ThinQ
    18
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    14
  • LG V30
    13
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
    13
  • Google Pixel 2 XL (Android 9)
    13

AnTuTu 7

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS
    346379
  • Oppo Find X
    291218
  • vivo NEX S
    287081
  • Sony Xperia XZ3
    284555
  • LG V40 ThinQ
    270634
  • Xiaomi Pocophone F1
    265314
  • OnePlus 6
    264200
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon)
    264044
  • HTC U12+
    263696
  • LG G7 ThinQ
    259393
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    248823
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    246660
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
    217298
  • Huawei P20 Pro
    209884
  • Google Pixel 2 XL (Android 9)
    206711
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
    203119
  • LG V30
    182374

GFX 3.1 Car scene (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone XS
    60
  • Oppo Find X
    35
  • LG G7 ThinQ
    35
  • LG V40 ThinQ
    35
  • OnePlus 6
    35
  • HTC U12+
    35
  • vivo NEX S
    35
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon)
    35
  • Sony Xperia XZ3
    35
  • Xiaomi Pocophone F1
    35
  • Xiaomi Mi 8
    33
  • Samsung Galaxy S9+
    28
  • Samsung Galaxy Note9
    28
  • Google Pixel 2 XL
    25
  • LG V30
    24
  • Google Pixel 2 XL (Android 9)
    24
  • Huawei P20 Pro
    23

Initial impressions

Ever since dual cameras came around, some of us here have been asking 'what about three?'. And not really Huawei's three, more like three separate focal lengths type of three.

LG V40 ThinQ hands-on review

There were the telephoto secondary cams and there was also LG persevering with their ultra wides. So it comes as no surprise that it's precisely LG bringing us the coveted triple setup adding a telephoto cam (in smartphone terms, at least) to complement its usual regular+ultra wide duo.

Now there are practicalities to deal with, like battery life, display brightness and colors, and all sorts of other testing, plus some more thorough pixel peeping than what we could do for this hands-on - the usual stuff that goes in an in-depth review. We'll be working on that in the coming days, no doubt about that.

But to wrap this up - it's three separate standalone cameras covering a focal length 'range' of 16mm to 50mm - with all those lenses on its back, LG needs to have messed up all the other stuff for the V40 ThinQ not to be a winner. After all, there can't be too many cameras on a smartphone, and no other has more yet.

Reader comments

  • Kiseki
  • 18 Oct 2019
  • nw4

I really like my V40. Good size. Good screen. Software is fine. But the battery is too small. I'm always charging the device. And for the love of God, I cannot take a decent enough photo in auto mode (photo's look flat), at least in my book. Whenever...

  • Ahmad Hassan
  • 12 Nov 2018
  • sR4

When would you make real review of LG V40.. I am still waiting.

My bad, I think I got picked up by his comment stating he: - "heard" (means it's not confirmed yet, just a gossip) that - Australia (he picked one particular country) - could spy with a special hacking software (come on, almost every countr...