Final Words

The Galaxy S7 in a lot of ways represents the sort of end game for the smartphone market, but before we get into these kinds of overarching discussions I want to recap everything we’ve learned about the Galaxy S7 before we get into the conclusion in earnest, which includes part 1 of this review.

We can start with design, where the Galaxy S7 shows quite a bit of resemblance to the Galaxy S6, with clear influence from the Galaxy Note5. Ergonomically the Galaxy S7 is just a step up. The Galaxy S7 edge is really more of the same as well, and I still have the same complaints about how the edge display affects ergonomics in a way that it doesn’t on the Galaxy S7, but both are okay. The one major note I have here since part 1 of the review is that screen protectors other than wet-applied TPU types are not really going to work properly on either the Galaxy S7 or S7 edge as the curve in the glass for both begins before the end of the display, so anything that is flat won’t cover the entire screen the way you might expect for the HTC 10 or iPhone 6s. The design doesn’t really blow me away, but it’s decent for its time.

The next notable area is battery life. While I’ve seen a lot of people rave about battery life on the Galaxy S7, however I don't feel the data backs this up. The Exynos 8890 variant is generally a step up in battery life, but the Snapdragon 820 variant is basically comparable to Exynos 7420 and by extension the Galaxy S6 and Note5. The Galaxy S7 edge is the only device that is an obvious step up in battery life for both variants, but this is through sheer battery capacity rather than any efficiency gains, as the Galaxy S7 edge ends up being a fairly heavy device in return for its great battery life. Charge time on both devices is competitive and in-line with expectations.

SoC performance, as well as storage performance are all commendable, but in general I don’t think there’s really been an appreciable change in the landscape with regard to SoCs. Snapdragon 820 and Exynos 8890 are both decently fast, but their speed is not really all that notable compared to Apple’s A9 SoC, especially when you consider things like browser performance which is heavily reliant on single-threaded performance. Kyro/Cortex-A72 is as good as you can get in the Android ecosystem at this time, so among Android phones this is top-tier performance, but in the broader landscape it's going to be overshadowed by what Apple has done.

The Galaxy S7 with Snapdragon 820 is also strangely slow in real-world situations as seen by Discomark, which is honestly somewhat puzzling. Samsung needs to put some real optimization effort into their Snapdragon devices as they actually trail the competition here to some extent, although if you aren’t that observant it’s unlikely you’ll notice a huge difference. Storage performance is great, but not really comparable to the iPhone 6s. This isn’t really a function of NVMe or UFS, but the design of the storage system itself. Given that Samsung is developing fairly small BGA SSDs already, I suspect the delta will go away soon. If you take away Apple devices, Samsung continues to ship some of the best storage on the market.

On the display side, Samsung continues to ship great AMOLED displays. While efficiency is not appreciably improved relative to the Galaxy S6 I would say that the best AMOLED panels now are greater than or equal to the best LCD panels. If Samsung can figure out how to reach efficiency parity with the best LCDs regardless of displayed content I would say that high end smartphones should really only be shipping AMOLED, but this is conditional upon whether OEMs can actually source these panels. Regardless, the Galaxy S7’s display is pretty much the best you can get in an Android device.

With camera, Samsung has managed to ship a fairly revolutionary camera sensor with phase detection at every pixel in the sensor, which makes it the fastest-focusing camera we’ve ever seen in a smartphone or tablet. Samsung has clearly prioritized speed here, and it’s great to see the kinds of amazing things Samsung is capable of achieving when their priorities are in the right place. However, with that said the output of the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge’s camera is not that impressive. I would argue that while it’s not worse than the iPhone 6s Plus, it is basically comparable. The real competition in this space comes from the HTC 10 and LG G5, the two of which manage to deliver arguably better still image output, and the HTC 10 manages to be comparable or better in video output other than slow motion. After a year of pointing out issues with slow motion video it seems Samsung has gotten around to shipping a solid implementation of this feature on the Galaxy S7, but they still seem to be limited by encode blocks on the Snapdragon 820 variant. The Galaxy S7 camera is good, but it’s not really amazing or all that well-rounded, unless you just don’t care about natural post-processing, good video stabilization, or detail-preserving noise reduction.

When it comes to WiFi, Samsung is doing an acceptable job, but not really a great one. The Broadcom BCM4359 chipset they’re shipping is a solid foundation, but throughput in general with respect to reception quality is just acceptable. Roaming latency is also well above what Apple is achieving with their devices. It does take enterprise-grade equipment to figure these issues out, but given the size of Samsung this should be a trivial task to get right. To be fair to Samsung, they are still doing better than HTC in this regard but Samsung is clearly trying to go after the enterprise market with the Galaxy S7 while HTC is still mostly targeting consumers.

The final area of discussion is software, and frankly Samsung’s UI just isn't something I find good. While the redesign with the Galaxy S5 was a solid step forward, in the time since Samsung has been stagnating in design yet again. While it’s fair to argue that design philosophies vary with culture, the Galaxy S7 is fundamentally an Android device and whatever changes Samsung makes to Android in terms of user interface need to be consistent in design so users have a similar experience with first party and third party apps. While themes can alleviate the issues to some extent, relying on third parties to solve fundamental problems with your user interface is really not what I would call a good user experience when themes can have noticeable effects on performance and battery life.

Outside of user interface design, it’s fairly obvious to me at this point that Samsung’s UI is just not particularly performant for whatever reason. While the 8890 variant might be better, the difference between the two SoCs is not so great that there should be noticeable frame drops in places like the app drawer, launcher, and settings app. Don’t get me wrong, the phone is usable despite these issues, but to continue justifying the $600+ USD price of these devices these problems just can’t be present.

Overall, the Galaxy S7 and S7 edge are solid phones, and overall are quite good. However looking at the broader path this phone has taken Samsung on, I’m left with the feeling that Samsung is just trying to follow industry trends rather than really approaching the design of their devices with some focus in mind. Samsung is clearly capable of incredible things as they were first to ship a device with UFS storage, the first to ship a 14nm FinFET SoC, and the first to ship a sensor with PDAF for each pixel.

The Galaxy S7 is clearly packed with features and ticks all the right boxes, but as soon as I start looking closer at everything I start to see cases where Samsung just doesn’t seem to care enough. Everything about the phone seems to be targeted towards being a great experience for the first week or two of ownership and while that strategy has worked well for them I’m left wondering what Samsung would be capable of if they cared about getting things right even if no one would notice the extra frame drop or 50ms of roam latency. I want Android phones that can be the best in the industry without any double standards, creative metrics, or qualifiers, and Samsung is clearly the OEM best-positioned to carry this out, so it's frustrating to see them fall short.

The Galaxy S7 and S7 edge are still great phones, but the difference between a $400 phone and a $700 phone are these details when phones like the OnePlus 3 are providing almost the same product at a dramatically reduced price. There are clear points of differentiation between the Galaxy S7 and OnePlus 3 or Mi5 in terms of features, but I don’t think it’s enough to be worth the $300. I think the only way to really justify the difference here is if you can get the Exynos 8890 version, which isn't necessarily an indictment of the Snapdragon 820, but rather the attention to detail that the Exynos variant receives.

Charge Time and Miscellaneous
Comments Locked

266 Comments

View All Comments

  • shm224 - Thursday, July 14, 2016 - link

    any idea why Anandtech is still using web/javascript benchmarks that are intended to measure software/javascript engine performance to measure the system / SOC performance?
  • ozmick1 - Saturday, July 16, 2016 - link

    The material (Samsung has told me plain glass and plastic) used over the rear camera lens if too fragile. Many owners are starting to complain of it breaking for no apparent reason as reported on Samsung's US Community website. Buyer beware with the S7 as it made from not-fit-for-purpose material. Samsung even told me that to prevent the rear lens from breaking - to leave the phone on the desk. Buyer beware with the S7.
  • FourEyedGeek - Monday, July 18, 2016 - link

    I just got the phone and I really like it. I used the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge for a couple of months and wasn't a fan, this is better in all the little things.

    The phone is snappy, interface moves smoothly and opening up applications leaves me with minimal load times. Mine has 32GB but is backed up with 200GB, I move large applications over to the SD card as a way of keeping the inbuilt a free as possible.

    It takes high quality pictures, not as nice as my DSLR but still good for a smartphone. The games I run play very smooth, much faster than the S6 Edge, my model uses the Exynos 8890.

    I've set up finger print scan, but isn't consistent enough for my liking, haven't used Samsung Pay and I'm not sure I will either but ny favourite cool feature is the water proofing. Used my phone under water for brief moments with my son and we love it. Make sure it is fully charged before dunking as the excellent moisture detection feature prevents charging until it is dry.
  • BuddyRich - Monday, July 18, 2016 - link

    Im rocking the S7 (not Edge - didn't like the cureved edges), while I disagree with some of review, one thing I have noticed, and you are the only other review to mention it, is the Camera lens flare issue with bright light sources at night. Not sure whats going on but I have the same issue with mine (Canadian S7 with the Exynos and different camera senor than 820s I believe, but same issue.) For an otherwise good camera this ruins it for me. Not everyone mentions it, but did you ever get a comment from Samsung on this, is it a defect perhaps? Its almost like they didn't put an AR coating on the lense or something.
  • InspectHerGadget - Sunday, July 31, 2016 - link

    I owned an S6 then the Note 5 and now the iPhone 6S Plus. I had previous to these, a Nokia 1520. All are great phones. The stand out feature of both the 1520 and 6S Plus is the battery life. The S7 will have the same issues with battery life that the S6 had, just slightly longer due to the larger battery. It isn't good enough and even the Note 5 battery life was only just adequate.

    I think that the review is outstanding and I appreciate the thorough approach to testing and reviewing. These phones are complex devices and every component needs to be analysed and tested. If you are going to shell out lots of money, you need to be sure of what you are buying.

    If a manufacturer such as Apple are shown to put together an outstanding device where every aspect of the device is exemplary, then the accolades are deserved. This doesn't happen by chance but is the result of blood, sweat and tears and thorough testing also.

    It is fair enough that Anandtech point out where Samsung have fallen short and why. It will put Samsung on notice to do better. Samsung are sloppy with what they do and they can't afford to be when up against Apple who make very few mistakes.
  • Bigbank - Tuesday, January 9, 2018 - link

    You need to have field experience.
    S7 is the best,  most versatile,  best  ROCKING audio on video playback.
    I'm sure the HTV will do a goid job, but if u can, u should.
    I'm sad because I can't allocate enough memory to 1080p, much less 1920p.
    Nice site

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now