Samsung Galaxy Note20 Ultra hands-on review
Display and S Pen
Displays have always been among the key selling points of Samsung phones - after all, it is a leading manufacturer of OLED panels in these sizes. The Galaxy Note20 pair is no different in this respect. Well, sort of.
Both panels boast a crazy high peak brightness of 1,500nits, a 25% increase over the S20s from just six months ago. That's useful for displaying HDR10+ content, which they support, but will also be helpful for outdoor visibility - not that the previous ones weren't great at that, it's just that the Note20s will be better.
Of course, don't expect to light up the entire screen with pure white and get all those nits - OLEDs scale brightness depending on the number of pixels being lit. We'll certainly be doing our own testing, when we get a review unit in our office.
And that's where the common traits of the two Notes' displays end. You see, it's only the Ultra that supports the 120Hz rate, and it's only the Ultra that has a QHD resolution. Meanwhile, the vanilla Note20's specsheet reads 60Hz and FullHD, and that's... disappointing.
The Galaxy Note20 Ultra's 6.9-inch display has a 1440x3088px resolution with 496ppi density in the somewhat unorthodox 19.3:9 aspect ratio. It's branded as Dynamic AMOLED 2X, Samsung's marketing speak for high refresh rate and the Note20 Ultra does go all the way up to 120Hz, complete with 240Hz touch sampling.
The HRR is done differently this time around than it was on the S20s, where you could pick between 60Hz and 120Hz and the phone would stay locked at those refresh rates regardless of what you're doing on it.
Here, you get two options - Standard (60Hz) and Adaptive, and that Adaptive mode is what's having us all excited. The Note20 Ultra will be able to dynamically adjust the refresh rate based on the activity you're in and the content being displayed, thus striking an optimal balance between smoothness and battery life. We'll be sure to examine it in more detail come review time.
What's abundantly clear already, however, is that you still don't get to the run the Note20 Ultra in its full resolution at its maximum refresh rate. Adaptive mode only works in 1080p, 1440p only works in 60Hz.
In more uplifting developments, the Note20 Ultra adopting a 120Hz screen enhances the S Pen experience. Samsung says it's improved the latency with which the phone recognizes and displays your S Pen input and it's now down to 9ms from the old Note's 42ms, making for an even more paper-like feel.
The Note20 doesn't match that number, however - its latency stands at 26ms. It's still an improvement over the outgoing model, but in what we feel is becoming a theme, it's no Ultra. Samsung talked about 'AI-based point prediction' which aims to anticipate the trajectory in which you'll be moving the S Pen, and that could be more at play here.
Both phones do get more Air actions, an S Pen functionality introduced with the 'active' stylus on the Note9. These are called Anywhere actions and work across the UI as opposed to the limited availability in the ones we had until now. Five new actions are introduced, and you'll able to launch Smart Select and Screen write with two of them, while the other three serve for basic navigation - Back, Home, and Recent tasks. We're not entirely sure someone would really use those, and in the limited time we had with the phones, we couldn't get them to work reliably. Maybe we'll give them another chance in the in-depth review. Solid maybe.
On a related topic to the S Pen, Samsung Notes has gotten an overhaul for this Note generation. It comes with improved handwriting recognition, straightening of already written text, new background colors and templates, PDF imports, audio-synced annotations, PowerPoint integration and syncing between different devices and platforms. If you do actually use your Note for keeping handwritten notes, this could offer a nice boost to your workflow.
The Note20 pair comes with Android 10 and OneUI 2.5 out of the box. That's a newer version of Samsung's Android overlay than we've seen on previous Galaxies, and while there's little immediately recognizable as new, we're certain there will be small bits we notice when we delve deeper. Perhaps more importantly, the Notes are promised to get three major OS updates - so expect to see Android 13 on the Note20 in 2022.
Wrap-up
The Galaxy Note20 and Note20 Ultra have finally arrived after much anticipation and the usual months-long stream of leaks. The S Pen flagships don't bring massive surprises and will remain high on shortlists for Samsung fans, there's no doubt about that.
What's taking us longer to wrap our heads around is the significant segmentation between the Ultra and the non-Ultra - it wasn't quite so prominent last year with the Note10 and Note10 Plus, and even the S20s from the spring had less of a gap in features. Is it Samsung trying to nudge you into buying the more expensive Ultra or is a way of getting the S Pen into more hands by offering two products that differ in more than just size?
We'll try to answer this and many other questions once we get to properly review the two phones. For the time being, we can say that pre-orders will be made in this office, though seemingly not quite as many as last year.
Reader comments
- Steve
- 06 Mar 2022
- SaV
Holy poop, I've dropped this phone at horrendous angles quite a few times without a case and it still doesn't have a scratch on it. Top teir phone quality and strength. My last phone (Huawei p90 smart) cracked in my pocket when a small...
- Abdul razack
- 09 Oct 2021
- nC7
Yes it's water and dust proof for around 30 minutes with 1m depth pool
- Anonymous
- 12 Apr 2021
- tA$
Because Samsung is very tired with all your complaint regarding the broken back panel because drop to the floor, and if you are using phone case, some phone case will close the shiny back panel, plus you are free from doubt that glass will broke whil...