Samsung Galaxy Note Edge review: The other side
The other side
Performance
The Samsung Galaxy Note Edge is powered by a Snapdragon 805 chipset - four Krait 450 cores join an Adreno 420 GPU and 3GB of RAM. They are needed too, since there are rich multitasking options and plenty of screen pixels.
Raw CPU performance is unbeatable among phablet-sized (and smaller) devices, it's even better than a similarly equipped Galaxy Note 4 according to GeekBench 3. AnTuTu 5 isn't quite as impressed but keep in mind that it includes graphics tests and the Galaxy Note Edge has slightly more pixels than the Note 4 (more on that in a bit).
GeekBench 3
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
3287 -
Motorola Nexus 6
3285 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
3011 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
2925 -
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
2884 -
LG G3 - EU version
2563
AnTuTu 5
Higher is better
-
Motorola Nexus 6
49803 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
46824 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
44258 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
43164 -
LG G3 - EU version
39905
Basemark OS II gives the lead to the Nexus 6 with the Galaxy Note Edge behind it. Keep in mind that the Nexus runs Android 5.0 Lollipop, which may prove to be an advantage - we won't know for sure until the Note Edge gets updated.
Basemark OS II
Higher is better
-
Motorola Nexus 6
1509 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
1260 -
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
1222 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
1181 -
LG G3 - EU version
1126 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
1082
AnTuTu reported that the screen resolution is 2,560 x 1,532px. QHD measures 2,560 x 1,440px - exactly four times 720p - but the Galaxy Note Edge has an extra 160px strip on the right that makes up the Edge screen and it seems part of that is used for the main screen too.
Anyway, off-screen performance at a standardized 1080p resolution shows the Adreno 420 GPU is among the fastest of the current generation.
When it comes to on-screen performance the pixel-rich screen does slow things down tangibly. You still get a lot more from the Galaxy Note Edge than from Adreno 330 devices (Snapdragon 801) even ones with lower resolution like the 1080p Galaxy S5.
Still, game developers might consider rendering at a lower internal resolution (say, 1080p) and upscaling the result, which will allow them to add more effects. Also keep in mind that benchmarks are always tougher than contemporary games.
GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
44.6 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
42.4 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
41.7 -
Motorola Nexus 6
38.9 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
27.8 -
LG G3 - EU version
27.2
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Motorola Nexus 6
18.6 -
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
18.6 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
18.5 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
18.3 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
11.8 -
LG G3 - EU version
11.4
GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
28.1 -
Motorola Nexus 6
27.4 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
26.5 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
26.4 -
LG G3 - EU version
20.5
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Motorola Nexus 6
11.9 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
11.7 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
11.2 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
9.9 -
LG G3 - EU version
7.2
Basemark X places the Galaxy Note Edge slightly behind the Galaxy Note 4.
Basemark X
Higher is better
-
Motorola Nexus 6
20901 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
18684 -
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
18297 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
17108 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
11744 -
LG G3 - EU version
11552
Great CPU performance usually means good JavaScript speed, but browsers can't reach the top without a specially tuned JS engine. Apple and Samsung are known to do it (so we used the Internet app instead of Google's Chrome). Kraken 1.1 shows Apple still has the lead but the Galaxy Note Edge is among the best-performing Androids.
Kraken 1.1
Lower is better
-
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
4650 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
5109 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
5351 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
6043 -
Motorola Nexus 6
6088 -
LG G3 - EU version
6987
Web page rendering is again slowed down by the resolution - QHD has nearly 80% more pixels than 1080p (like the iPhone 6 Plus screen) and the Galaxy Note Edge goes a bit over QHD as we saw in the game section.
BrowserMark 2.1
Higher is better
-
Apple iPhone 6 Plus
3389 -
Samsung Galaxy Note 4
2208 -
Samsung Galaxy Note Edge
2056 -
LG G3 - EU version
1474 -
Motorola Nexus 6
1447 -
Samsung Galaxy S5 (S801)
1398
We used the specialized versions of Basemark X and Basemark OS II to find if the Samsung Galaxy Note Edge cheats. We didn't find a significant difference in the results but we did notice the Note Edge is susceptible to heat - its performance drops when it gets hot. That's a common problem for high-power devices though.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 30 Mar 2022
- 3Hh
Don't say samsung is shit
- DPJ shina
- 17 Oct 2021
- fsV
Please make some games possible to danload for the sake of everyone
- Apple user
- 14 Oct 2021
- iid
That’s the only phone from Samsung that i love.. otherwise Samsung phones are shit