Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 review: Double vision

Double vision

GSMArena team, 07 March 2014.

Synthetic benchmarks and performance

The Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 is running on the Snapdragon 400 mid-range chipset. It offers four Cortex-A7 CPU cores, Adreno 305 graphics and 1.5GB of RAM. We've already seen the S400 in action on the Motorola Moto G and it delivered indeed a snappy performance. The Galaxy Grand 2 features 1.5GB RAM, which should help it deal with the higher resolution screen. We already saw Android 4.3 Jelly Bean with TouchWiz running great on the Galaxy Grand 2, so now we'll be testing the smartphone's raw performance.

The Cortex-A7 processor cores clocked at 1.2GHz delivers a decent mid-range performance very close to their Cortex-A9 counterparts, with the added benefit of lower power consumption.

Our first test is all about single-core performance, where the Grand 2 scored similar results to most of the Cortex-A7-powered competitors such as the Moto G and Xperia C.

Benchmark Pi

Lower is better

  • LG G Flex
    99
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    166
  • Sony Xperia Z
    264
  • HTC Butterfly
    266
  • Oppo Find 5
    267
  • HTC One X+
    280
  • LG Optimus G
    285
  • HTC One mini
    293
  • Samsung Galaxy Express
    346
  • Sony Xperia C
    374
  • Motorola Moto G
    392
  • Sony Xperia M
    400
  • Samsung Galaxy S II Plus
    409
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    413
  • Sony Xperia L
    435
  • Samsung Galaxy S III mini
    499
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    519
  • Sony Xperia go
    543
  • HTC Desire 600 dual sim
    554
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    578
  • HTC Desire X
    639
  • Sony Xperia E dual
    800
  • Samsung Galaxy Young
    831

Next up, we put all four cores to the test in the multi-core version of the Linpack benchmark. The Galaxy Grand 2 matched the S400-powered Moto G, but fell behind most of the quad-core devices we've tested so far.

Linpack

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia Z1
    1004
  • Samsung Galaxy S4
    788
  • HTC One
    646
  • Sony Xperia Z
    630
  • HTC Butterfly
    624
  • LG Optimus G
    608
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    413
  • Sony Xperia SP
    348
  • HTC One mini
    320
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    274
  • Motorola Moto G
    259
  • Nexus 4
    213.5
  • Sony Xperia L
    191
  • HTC One X+
    177
  • Samsung Galaxy S III
    175
  • Sony Xperia M
    168.3
  • HTC One X
    160
  • LG Optimus 4X HD
    141
  • Sony Xperia C
    132.3
  • HTC Desire 600 dual sim
    107.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    85
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    68

We also run the GeekBench 3 CPU benchmark. The Galaxy Grand 2 once again matched the score of quad-core Cortex-A7 running Moto G, Xperia C and Oppo R819.

Geekbench 3

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    2937
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    2670
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    2638
  • Apple iPhone 5s
    2561
  • LG Nexus 5
    2453
  • LG G2
    2243
  • HTC One
    1972
  • HTC One Max
    1899
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    1869
  • LG Optimus G
    1623
  • Meizu MX3
    1579
  • Huawei Ascend P6
    1315
  • LG Nexus 4
    1288
  • HTC Butterfly
    1257
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1159
  • Motorola Moto G
    1120
  • Sony Xperia C
    1079
  • Oppo R819
    1047
  • HTC One mini
    887
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    564

AnTuTu 4 gauges the overall device performance instead of just the CPU and the Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 managed to output half the scores of the top Snapdragon 800 chips. The Quadrant test does the same as AnTuTu, but the Galaxy Grand 2 produced uninspiring score, though matching the Moto G completely.

AnTuTu

Higher is better

  • LG G Flex
    35831
  • LG G2
    35444
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    32162
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    31109
  • LG Nexus 5
    25097
  • HTC One
    22678
  • Sony Xperia Z
    20794
  • Motorola Moto G
    17214
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    17106
  • Oppo Find 5
    15167
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    14518
  • Sony Xperia C
    13948
  • HTC Butterfly
    12631
  • HTC One mini
    11434
  • HTC Desire 600 dual sim
    11203
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    10448
  • Sony Xperia M
    9902
  • Sony Xperia L
    9746
  • Nokia Lumia 620
    9140
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    7408
  • Samsung Galaxy Xcover 2
    6650

Quadrant

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia Z1
    20388
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    20052
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    18177
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (Octa)
    12446
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    12376
  • LG Optimus G Pro
    12105
  • HTC One
    11746
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    11404
  • LG Nexus 5
    8844
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    8588
  • Motorola Moto G
    8508
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    7153
  • HTC One mini
    6048
  • Sony Xperia V
    5816
  • HTC Desire 600 dual sim
    5053
  • Samsung Galaxy Express
    4998
  • Sony Xperia C
    4941
  • Sony Xperia L
    4279
  • Sony Xperia M
    4147
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    3240
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    3152

It's time to test the Adreno 305 graphic processing unit. We ran both GFX Benchmark tests in off-screen mode, testing raw GPU power. The Galaxy Grand 2 was a match for the Moto G, while its Adreno 305 did better than the PowerVR SGX544 GPU found over the Xperia C's MT6589.

GFX Benchmark 2.7 T-Rex (1080p off-screen)

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    26.3
  • LG Nexus 5
    23
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    23
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    23
  • Apple iPhone 5s
    23
  • LG G Pro 2
    22.9
  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    22
  • LG G Flex
    22
  • LG G2
    22
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    17.1
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (Octa)
    17.1
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 Active
    16
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    15
  • HTC One max
    14
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    6.4
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    5.8
  • HTC One mini
    5.6
  • Motorola Moto G
    5.6
  • Samsung Galaxy Note II
    4.9
  • Sony Xperia C
    2.8

GFX Benchmark 3.0 Manhattan (1080p off-screen)

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    9.9
  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    9
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 8.4
    8.9
  • LG G Pro 2
    8.7
  • LG Nexus 5
    8.5
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    3.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1.9

Then we've run them again, this time onscreen. The Galaxy Grand 2 did better here thanks to its HD resolution halving the scores of the Adreno 330 GPU inside the Snapdragon 800 chipsets.

GFX Benchmark 2.7 T-Rex (1080p on-screen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 5s
    37
  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    34
  • LG G Flex
    33
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    26.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    25
  • LG G Pro 2
    24.1
  • LG Nexus 5
    24
  • LG G2
    23.1
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    10.6

GFX Benchmark 3.0 Manhattan (1080p on-screen)

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    10
  • LG G Pro 2
    9.2
  • Samsung Galaxy Tab Pro 8.4
    5
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    4.7
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    4.0

We also ran Epic Citadel benchmark on the Ultra High Quality setting. Here the Galaxy Grand 2 showed even though its GPU may be struggling to handle 1080p resolution, the Adreno 305 graphic chip offers nicely playable framerates on the HD resolution display. And a strong case can be made that this is what actually counts.

Epic Citadel

Higher is better

  • LG G Flex
    56
  • Sony Xperia Z
    55.6
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    54.8
  • LG G Pro 2
    54.1
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    54
  • Asus Padfone 2
    53.4
  • LG Nexus 5
    49.1
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    49
  • Alcatel One Touch Hero
    43.5
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    37.2
  • Motorola Moto G
    34
  • Huawei Ascend Mate
    33.2
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    32
  • HTC Butterfly
    29.6

The JavaScript performance of the Galaxy Grand 2's default web browser is quite decent, matching the Snapdragon S4 quad-core gang.

SunSpider

Lower is better

  • Apple iPhone 5s
    403
  • LG G Pro 2
    535.5
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    567.9
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    587
  • Apple iPhone 5
    694
  • Apple iPhone 5c
    704
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    750
  • LG Nexus 5
    827
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    845
  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    855
  • LG G2
    908
  • LG Optimus G Pro
    1011
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    1046
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1063.3
  • HTC One
    1174
  • Motorola Moto G
    1308
  • Sony Xperia C
    1319
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    1337
  • HTC One mini
    1375
  • LG Nexus 4
    1379
  • HTC Butterfly
    1397
  • Oppo R819
    1423

The combined BrowserMark 2 benchmark results were great, very close to the S600 gang and similar to the Motorola Moto G.

BrowserMark 2

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 5s
    3549
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3 Neo
    3172
  • LG G Pro 2
    3048
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    3041
  • Apple iPhone 5
    2825
  • Apple iPhone 5c
    2799
  • Oppo N1
    2769
  • LG Nexus 5
    2745
  • LG G2
    2718
  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    2600
  • Motorola Moto G
    2562
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600)
    2438
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    2432
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    2419
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    2398
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    2314
  • HTC One
    2262
  • HTC One mini
    2164
  • LG Optimus G Pro
    1801
  • HTC Butterfly
    1475
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    1469
  • Samsung Galaxy S III
    1247
  • Samsung Galaxy Express
    1154
  • Samsung Galaxy S III mini
    714

Finally, the Galaxy Grand 2 placed near the middle of the chart in the Vellamo browser benchmark.

Vellamo

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia Z1 Compact
    2996
  • Sony Xperia Z Ultra
    2944
  • LG G2
    2908
  • Sony Xperia Z1
    2904
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 3
    2853
  • Sony Xperia SP
    2497
  • HTC One
    2382
  • HTC One mini
    2252
  • Sony Xperia Z
    2189
  • Samsung Galaxy S4
    2060
  • Samsung Galaxy S4 mini
    2019
  • Samsung Galaxy Grand 2
    1989
  • Motorola Moto G
    1928
  • HTC Butterfly
    1866
  • Sony Xperia M
    1800
  • Sony Xperia L
    1640
  • HTC Desire 600 dual sim
    1572
  • LG Optimus 4X HD
    1568
  • LG Optimus G
    1522
  • Samsung Galaxy Ace 3
    1409
  • Samsung Galaxy Core
    1366
  • Nexus 4
    1310
  • Samsung Galaxy Fame
    1234
  • Samsung Galaxy Young
    1072
  • Sony Xperia E dual
    1065

The Samsung Galaxy Grand 2 might not be the benchmark beast geeks would dream about, but it's not underpowered by any means. The quad-core Snapdragon 400 is powerful enough to provide fast, fluid and lag-free performance on the HD resolution and will handle well every app and game out there. And in this price range, this is more than enough.

Reader comments

  • RevaX
  • 27 Jul 2022
  • PTb

I Found This Phone In My at 2month ago I flashed the lineage os 16 Everything is OK for daily usage of social apps *2014 phone still capable of running with android 9 while my last redmi not! fkk "mtk"

  • Anonymous
  • 01 May 2022
  • t7X

How to use the the screenshot?

  • Anonymous
  • 25 Mar 2022
  • 6p}

4g