Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017) review: Marathoner with a punch
Marathoner with a punch
Synthetic benchmarks
Beating inside the Galaxy A7 (2017) is Samsung's own Exynos 7880. It is the updated version of last year's 7870 - one of the pioneers of mid-range efficiency of a 14nm manufacturing process. The updated version keeps the overall formula intact only introducing a small clock rate bump in the Cortex-A53 cores (1.9GHz vs. 1.6GHz). RAM speeds have also been boosted thanks to LPDDR4 support, as opposed to the 7870's LPDDR3.
Upgrades are actually more significant in the GPU department. The Mali-T830 now has a third core and a higher clock rate of 950MHz, versus 700MHz. This is great for keeping up with rendering on the 1080p screen.
Despite all of the improvements to the new Exynos 7880 SoC, it is still a mid-range chip by design. While it does offer plenty of performance for most users, paired with the A7 (2017)'s premium exterior, it makes for a rather confusing combination in value to performance terms. In hardware terms, it is much better suited to compete with its Exynos 7870 siblings, like the Galaxy J7 (2016) or A3 (2017). Over at camp Quaclomm, a nice performance peer would be the Snapdragon 625 - made on a equally efficient 14nm process. This brings to mind handsets like the Galaxy C7, Moto Z Play, Lenovo P2 or the extremely popular Xiaomi Redmi Note 4. The thing is, all of these are priced well below the EUR 400 mark.
In terms of pure price competitors, the truth is EUR 450 can buy you proper flagship-grade hardware and the performance to match. Some good examples include the OnePlus 3T, Xperia Z5 Premium or the Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus and its sibling - the Mi Note 2. So, in the name of fairness, we decided to include all of them in the performance charts.
Kicking things off with GeekBench 4 and single core performance, we see a couple of predictable patterns. For one, the Cortex-A53 cores inside the Exynos 7880 perform noticeably better than their 7870 counterparts, the bump in clock speed has paid off. On the other hand, the Snapdragon 625 takes things even further with a bump in core speed up to 2GHz. That seems to equate to about 10% better performance on average.
GeekBench 4 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
1890 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
1854 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
1824 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
1815 -
ZTE Axon 7
1702 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
1694 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
1546 -
vivo V5 Plus
846 -
Oppo R9s
845 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
843 -
Lenovo P2
840 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
839 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
795 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
776 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
764 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
681
Multi-threaded performance is a whole different story. Just like its Snapdragon 625 counterpart from the Qualcomm realm, the Exynos 7880 can utilize all of its eight Cortex-A53 cores at the same time. This results in massive performance increases, putting the A7 (2017) a mere 200 or so points away from something like the OnePlus 3T and its top-of-the-line Snapdragon 821 chipset. Sadly, however, these numbers don't really translate to real world performance in the same way.
This definitely starts to shine through in a test like BaseMark OS II. It is a lot more compound and extensive and doesn't limit itself to CPU alone. It is good to see that the Galaxy A7 (2017) holds its own very well, effectively leading the pack of 14nm mid-ranges. That is a good sign for the performance levels of the phone's internals in general - storage is pretty snappy and the new LPDDR4 RAM is definitely faster than its predecessor.
Basemark OS II
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
3328 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
2814 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
2698 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
2677 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
2603 -
Huawei P9 Plus
2155 -
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
2073 -
Huawei Mate 8
2033 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
2004 -
ZTE Axon 7
1889 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
1619 -
Lenovo P2
1400 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
1368 -
vivo V5 Plus
1325 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
1226 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
999
The same goes for AnTuTu. The A7 (2017) does lose some ground this time around, but still manages to perform respectively and in a predictable manner, pacing it right alongside its scaled-down A5 (2017) brother.
AnTuTu 6
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
165097 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
155185 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
151619 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
140871 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
140324 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
132084 -
ZTE Axon 7
129926 -
Huawei P9 Plus
97392 -
Huawei Mate 8
91609 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
85162 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
74488 -
Oppo R9s
66081 -
vivo V5 Plus
63812 -
Lenovo P2
63493 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
63358 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
62818 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
62454 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
62217 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
61020 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
60767 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
49094 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
45742 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
35689 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2016)
35134
It appears that an extra GPU core and a clock boost can really go far in terms of pixel-pushing power. The Mali-T830MP3 outperforms the Adreno 506 inside the Snapdragon 625 without even breaking a sweat.
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
49 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
49 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
47 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
44 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
40 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
38 -
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
26 -
Huawei Mate 8
18 -
Huawei P9 Plus
18 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
15 -
ZTE Axon 7
15 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
15 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
15 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
14 -
Oppo R9s
10 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
9.9 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
9.9 -
vivo V5 Plus
9.9 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
9.8 -
Lenovo P2
9.8 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
9.8 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2016)
5.7 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
5.7 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
5.1 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
4.9
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
48 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
47 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
41 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
31 -
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
27 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
27 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
27 -
Huawei P9 Plus
19 -
Huawei Mate 8
18 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
15 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
15 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
15 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
15 -
ZTE Axon 7
12 -
Lenovo P2
10 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
10 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
9.9 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
9.7 -
vivo V5 Plus
9.7 -
Oppo R9s
9.7 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
9.6 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
9.6 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
9.5 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2016)
5.7 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
5.7
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
33 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
32 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
31 -
ZTE Axon 7
31 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
30 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
30 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
28 -
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
18 -
Huawei Mate 8
10 -
Huawei P9 Plus
10 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
9.5 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
9.4 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
9.1 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
9.1 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
7.2 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
6.2 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
6.2 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
6.2 -
vivo V5 Plus
6.2 -
Lenovo P2
6.2 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
6.2 -
Oppo R9s
6.2 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
3.2
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
33 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
32 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
30 -
Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
19 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
18 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
15 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
15 -
ZTE Axon 7
15 -
Huawei Mate 8
11 -
Huawei P9 Plus
11 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
9.4 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
9.4 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
9 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
9 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
7.3 -
Lenovo P2
6.7 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
6.7 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
6.2 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
6.1 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
6.1 -
vivo V5 Plus
6.1 -
Oppo R9s
6.1 -
Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
3.2
However, cranking up the heat does punish the Mali-T830MP3 quite a bit, 3 cores or not. A frame rate of 5.2 fps is hardly enjoyable or even playable, by any standard. However, real-life gaming on the A7 (2017) is still a blast. It not only has ample room on its 5.7-inch screen for two-handed controls, but most games scale back so gracefully nowadays that you might not even notice. Plus, Samsung's Game Launcher and Game Tools give an extra layer of control over fine details, so you can really customize your experience.
GFX 3.1 Car scene (offscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
20 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
20 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
19 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
18 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
18 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
15 -
ZTE Axon 7
15 -
Huawei P9 Plus
6.2 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
5.5 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
5.4 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
5.2 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
5.2 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
3.4 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
3.4 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
3.4 -
vivo V5 Plus
3.4 -
Lenovo P2
3.4 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
3.4 -
Oppo R9s
3.4 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
1.9
GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 3T
20 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
20 -
Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
19 -
ZTE Axon 7
16 -
Lenovo Moto Z Droid
12 -
Vivo Xplay5 Elite
9.8 -
Samsung Galaxy S7
7.9 -
Huawei P9 Plus
6.8 -
Xiaomi Mi Max
5.4 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (Helio X20)
5.4 -
Samsung Galaxy A7 (2017)
5.2 -
Samsung Galaxy A5 (2017)
5.2 -
Samsung Galaxy A3 (2017)
3.9 -
Lenovo P2
3.7 -
Motorola Moto Z Play
3.7 -
Samsung Galaxy C7
3.4 -
Asus Zenfone 3 ZE552KL
3.4 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note 4 (S625)
3.4 -
vivo V5 Plus
3.4 -
Oppo R9s
3.4
Overall, the Galaxy A7 (2017) with its Exynos 7880 puts out quite good performance numbers for its hardware and it's on par with Qualcomm's energy efficiency champion - the Snapdragon 625.
All things considered, we couldn't really ask much more out of such a frugal chip. It easily chews through all everyday tasks and even split-window use is no trouble whatsoever. We really feel like this particular approach to making efficient mid-range chips is the perfect way of bringing true value to the average user.
That being said, if you are looking to get the most performance for your dollar in this price range, the new Galaxy A series isn't really the way to go.
Reader comments
- roronil obiera
- 06 Jun 2024
- xPP
the touch screen of my samsung a7 2017 it is not working
- Moses
- 11 Jul 2022
- fu%
Common error of Moisture detected issue popping up when there is neither dirt nor moisture in the charging port
- Mr Khamsay
- 20 Jan 2020
- yMp
when i update Android version 8 my internet 4G very slowly. can you tell me what happen ?