Sony Xperia XZ1 review: XZibit one
XZibit one
Synthetic benchmarks
The Sony Xperia XZ1 comes with Snapdragon 835, complete with 4GB of RAM. Being one of the first out the door with an Oreo ROM out of the box does mean bumping into quite a few software optimization issues along the way. And we are not just talking about Sony's own various pieces of code, running on the new OS. Third-party software needs time and to properly adapt to Oreo and its new APIs. That process depends entirely on the app developers out there.
Benchmark apps need to be properly adjusted to adequately handle every new iteration of Google's mobile OS. Major updates, especially. This is why relatively bigger margins of error can be expected in the following test scores.
It is important to note that even at this state, from a real-word user standpoint, the Xperia ROM we tested on our device ran smoothly with no hiccups. The powerful Snapdragon 835 naturally had no trouble chewing through every task we threw its way. That being said, let's kick off with a pure CPU benchmark.
GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8+
6754 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
6719 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
6629 -
OnePlus 5
6604 -
Nokia 8
6568 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
6541 -
HTC U11
6393 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
6301 -
LG V30 (non-final)
6151 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
5460 -
LG G6
4175
GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8+
1986 -
OnePlus 5
1932 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
1929 -
Nokia 8
1925 -
HTC U11
1919 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
1915 -
LG V30 (non-final)
1904 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
1840 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
1836 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
1832 -
LG G6
1767
Still the XZ1 holds its own amid a crowd of flagship hardware offers. Judging by the single-core results, there might be room for optimization yet, in order to squeeze out a hundred or so points extra and catch up to the likes of the OnePlus 5 or Mi 6.
GeekBench 4 (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 5
6404 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
6338 -
Nokia 8
6293 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
6293 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
6278 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
6132 -
HTC U11
6125 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
6106 -
Huawei P10
6069 -
LG V30 (non-final)
5869 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
5837 -
LG G6
4209 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
4139 -
Sony Xperia XZs
3979 -
Sony Xperia XZ
3868
GeekBench 4 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 5
2031 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
2026 -
Nokia 8
2005 -
HTC U11
1993 -
LG V30 (non-final)
1986 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
1986 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
1943 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
1938 -
Huawei P10
1927 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
1915 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
1913 -
LG G6
1733 -
Sony Xperia XZs
1724 -
Sony Xperia XZ
1578 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
1535
GeekBench 4 does seem to favor the Xperia XZ1 a bit more than the newer version of the benchmark. The compute score it managed to pull is especially impressive. Or put another way - a Snapdragon 835 doing what it is designed to do - provide top-notch performance.
Geekbench 4 Compute
Higher is better
-
Sony Xperia XZ1
8003 -
HTC U11
7992 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
7577 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
6920 -
LG G6
6484
Basemark OS 2.0 seems to be a little less kind to the Xperia XZ1 than GeekBench 4, but its result card does resemble that of GeekBench 4.1 pretty closely. Granted, the XZ1 seems to be near the bottom of the Snapdragon 835 bunch. The again, it appears to give Samsung's Exynos 8895 less of an edge in performance. Even less so for Huawei's Kirin 960.
Basemark OS 2.0
Higher is better
-
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
3609 -
OnePlus 5
3601 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
3547 -
Nokia 8
3503 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
3319 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
3298 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
3174 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
2986 -
HTC U11
2970 -
Huawei P10
2910 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
2461 -
Sony Xperia XZs
2386 -
Sony Xperia XZ
2151 -
LG G6
2126
AnTuTu also evaluates things like storage and GPU performance and the XZ1 produces a score matching the XZ Premium. Sony phones are actually not quite on par with the other 835 chips here, but this appears to be due some sort of an issue with the benchmark app itself than their performance.
AnTuTu 6
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 5
180331 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
178674 -
HTC U11
177343 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
177326 -
Nokia 8
175872 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
174070 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
168133 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
144462 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
144223 -
LG G6
143639 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
141193 -
Sony Xperia XZs
133574 -
Huawei P10
126629 -
Sony Xperia XZ
124266
We now move on to the graphics department with the GFX tests.
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
61 -
HTC U11
60 -
OnePlus 5
60 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
59 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
57 -
Nokia 8
57 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
50 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
50 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
49 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
49 -
Sony Xperia XZs
42 -
LG G6
41 -
Sony Xperia XZ
37 -
Huawei P10
29
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi 6
56 -
OnePlus 5
56 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
48 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
48 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
47 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
40 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
40 -
Sony Xperia XZs
40 -
Sony Xperia XZ
37 -
HTC U11
35 -
Huawei P10
35 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
34 -
Nokia 8
33 -
LG G6
24
The Adreno 540 is a powerful graphics unit and combined with the 1080p resolution on the XZ1 it produces some impressive scores on the on-screen tests.
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8+
42 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
42 -
HTC U11
41 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
41 -
OnePlus 5
41 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
39 -
Nokia 8
39 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
39 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
39 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
33 -
Sony Xperia XZs
32 -
Sony Xperia XZ
31 -
LG G6
26 -
Huawei P10
22
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi 6
41 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
41 -
OnePlus 5
40 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
40 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
34 -
Sony Xperia XZs
34 -
Sony Xperia XZ
32 -
Huawei P10
30 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
23 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
22 -
HTC U11
19 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
18 -
Nokia 8
18 -
LG G6
12
OpenGL ES tests paint a similar picture - the Xperia XZ1 is well prepared to handle your gaming needs.
GFX 3.1 Car scene (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Nokia 8
32 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
25 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
25 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
25 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
25 -
HTC U11
24 -
OnePlus 5
24 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
24 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
23 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
20 -
Sony Xperia XZ
20 -
Sony Xperia XZs
20 -
LG G6
16 -
Huawei P10
14
GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi 6
25 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
25 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
25 -
OnePlus 5
24 -
Sony Xperia XZs
21 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
20 -
Sony Xperia XZ
19 -
Huawei P10
16 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
15 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+
13 -
HTC U11
13 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
12 -
Nokia 8
12 -
LG G6
8.5
Basemark ES 3.1 / Metal
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8+
1111 -
Motorola Moto Z2 Force
867 -
Xiaomi Mi 6
861 -
Nokia 8
855 -
Sony Xperia XZ1
853 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
842 -
HTC U11
836 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
817 -
OnePlus 5
796 -
Huawei P10
716 -
Google Pixel (5.0)
626 -
Sony Xperia XZs
623 -
Sony Xperia XZ
577 -
LG G6
541
The Xperia XZ1 really does live up to flagship standards. This might come off the wrong way, but the thing is, we anticipated a lot more "growing pains" associated with the Android 8 integration. Sony's mobile division deserves plenty of praise for getting things right on the first try. Some of the benchmark scores might be a bit behind the Snpadragon 835 competition, but margins are small and the real-life performance is as snappy as we've come to expect.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 15 Nov 2024
- EqZ
Android 14.0.2
- Small Phone Guy
- 06 Oct 2023
- jeR
Love this phone, I wish there was a slightly updated model so I could buy it again in 2023. The corners could stand to be a touch more rounded but otherwise it's pretty amazing! Why won't anyone make small Android phones with decent specs a...
- Sup
- 19 Apr 2022
- B0@
And that is why today in 2022 you have the same basic, boring design with no headphone jacks. Guess who still has no notches, has Led notification and a headphone jack? That's right.