MWC 2015: Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 edge hands-on

Samsung at MWC 2015

GSMArena team, 1 March 2015.

Samsung Galaxy S6 & Galaxy S6 benchmarks

The Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 edge are the first two smartphones with a 14nm chipset, Samsung's Exynos 7420. Both are running a Samsung-customized version of Android 5.0 Lollipop.

The rest of the phones we've picked for this comparison were running Lollipop too (some modified, some not), except for the Apple iPhone 6 Plus, which was on iOS 8, of course.

On the CPU side, Samsung put four Cortex-A57 cores at 2.1GHz and four Cortex-A53 cores at 1.5GHz. That's almost the same setup as the Snapdragon 810 found in the LG G Flex2 and HTC One M9 (except the A57 cores are clocked at 2GHz), but Samsung's manufacturing advantage (14nm vs. 20nm) should produce less heat and thus less throttling.

The Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 edge open with massive wins in Geekbench (a CPU benchmark) and AnTuTu (an overall performance bench).

GeekBench 3

Higher is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    4916
  • HTC One M9
    3873
  • LG G Flex2
    3604
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    3394
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    3285
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    3214
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    3120
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    2970
  • LG G3
    2370

AnTuTu 5

Higher is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    68896
  • HTC One M9
    57422
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    51905
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    49803
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    49273
  • LG G Flex2
    47680
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    45660
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    45348
  • LG G3
    42038

Basemark OS II, another full system test, is not nearly as impressed with the new chipset and places the LG G Flex2 and its Snapdragon 810, while the Exynos 7420 and Galaxy S6 drop towards the middle.

Basemark OS II

Higher is better

  • LG G Flex2
    1601
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    1509
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    1332
  • LG G3
    1327
  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    1269
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    1173
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    1147
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    915

Kraken 1.1, a JavaScript benchmark, breaks the tie with the Samsung Galaxy S6 barely edging out the HTC One M9 and the LG G Flex2.

Kraken 1.1

Lower is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    4323
  • HTC One M9
    4578
  • LG G Flex2
    4621
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    4911
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    5181
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    5968
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    6088
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    6260
  • LG G3
    7632

We move to GPU testing. Exynos once again calls on ARM for the hardware, while Snapdragon 810 uses Qualcomm's own Adreno 430 chips. The iPhone 6 GPU comes from PowerVR, GX6450 to be precise.

Basemark X

Higher is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    22752
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    20901
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    20043
  • HTC One M9
    19836
  • LG G Flex2
    19360
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    12190
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    11798
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    11065
  • LG G3
    10580

The Galaxy S6 pair also uses a QHD screen – 1,440 x 2,560px – while most of the rest are at 1080p (except the Nexus 6 and LG G3). 1080p is close to half the number of pixels compared to QHD, so look at off-screen benchmarks to compare raw power and on-screen scores to compare gaming performance.

Mali-T760 seems evenly matched with the Adreno 430 and is enough to offer a playable framerate for games with GFX 2.7 level graphics.

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    49
  • LG G Flex2
    49
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    40
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    38.9
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    31.3
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    27
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    27
  • LG G3
    26

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    23
  • HTC One M9
    23
  • LG G Flex2
    22
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    18.6
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    18
  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    13.4
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    12
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    12
  • LG G3
    11

GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    48.4
  • LG G Flex2
    48
  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    35
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    29
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    28
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    27.4
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    26
  • LG G3
    20

GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Samsung Galaxy Alpha
    25.3
  • HTC One M9
    24
  • LG G Flex2
    22
  • Galaxy S6/S6 edge
    16
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    13
  • Samsung Galaxy S5
    12
  • Motorola Nexus 6
    11.9
  • Samsung Galaxy Note 4
    11
  • LG G3
    7.7

The Samsung Galaxy S6 duo will launch on April 10 so the time for tuning the software is running short. The overall difference isn’t that huge, but we still see why Samsung was keen to go with its in-house chip. Given the right workload the Exynos can come ahead of Qualcomm's top dog. It's also well-suited for modern games even with the screen's resolution jump.

Reader comments

hii guys, i am hoping to buy a GS6 or GS6 EDGE soon, but i am confused which one to buy. I like the EDGE look not the feel.Its a new tech and i wish to have it, but it felt more comfortable using the GS6 than the edge version and it feels little di...

  • The Reader
  • 10 Mar 2015
  • MFM

If you really are a seller then you know nothing about selling, prices and how to upsell or cross-sell. Overpriced? Maybe, for 1 or 2 months then the price will drop like rain. ask your manager what are these 2 first months for and the why for the ov...

  • incei
  • 05 Mar 2015
  • 3KB

Overhyped.. edge is a minus to me.. only samsung want's this.. overprized.. same shit like apple does.. because costumers are stupid sheeps.. and i'm 100% sure there will be the camera reddot problem in some conditions.. greetz, a mobile seller