Display

I thought it would be important to give potential buyers some idea of how good the display is on the ZenFone 2. On paper it looks very good, as it's a 5.5" 1920x1080 IPS display. The pixel density isn't as high as the latest generation of 2560x1440 panels, but I find that with an RGB stripe panel the difference between 1920x1080 and 2560x1440 is minimal even at 5.5".

Display - Max Brightness

Display - Black Levels

The ZenFone 2 appears to be off to a good start. Black levels are very low among our LCDs, and the max brightness is somewhat low but not terrible by any means. I never had any issues when using the ZenFone 2 outside, although it was definitely not as comfortable as the Galaxy S6.

Display - Contrast Ratio

The slightly low max brightness and above average black level results put the ZenFone 2 right in the middle of our LCD devices when it comes to contrast ratio.

Unfortunately, these numbers are somewhat misleading. This is because the ZenFone 2 makes extremely heavy use of dynamic contrast and contect adaptive backlighting. I have never used another device with such dramatic shifts in backlight power. The best example I've found is when switching from an all black to all white screen at max brightness. While this is obviously an extreme case, it illustrates the behavior that is occuring very well. At the moment you switch to white, the brightness of the display is around 170 nits. Over the next few seconds, that brightness rapidly increases to the 390 nits you see in the results above. This is an enormous jump in brightness, and it's very easy to see with your own eyes.

One last thing I'd like to note about the brightness is that the 100% setting on the built in brightness slider is not actually the max brightness that the display is capable of. The max you can achieve using the slider in the Settings app is 319 nits, which is around 82% of the 390 nit result you can get using applications like Brightness Adjuster from Google Play.

Display - Gamut Accuracy

The gamut results are unfortunately not as good as what we've seen from the latest generation of smartphones. The DeltaE for red, blue, and magenta are all just over three, while the remaining three colors are around five. The high error in white also contributes to the higher than optimal overall error.

The complete review of the ZenFone 2 should be posted in the near future, and it will include the remainder of our display workflow. The heavy use of CABC and dynamic contrast has a large impact on the display's performance in some of our tests, and so I'll also be elaborating on where and why that occurs, and what it means for the user. For anyone who really wants to order the ZenFone 2 now, I'll conclude by saying that it's definitely not perfect, but it's still a good display. I think it's by far the nicest one you'll find on a phone that starts at $199 purely because of its resolution.

Introduction Performance and Initial Thoughts
Comments Locked

139 Comments

View All Comments

  • mfred - Monday, May 18, 2015 - link

    Neat!
  • chrone - Monday, May 18, 2015 - link

    looking forward for the consistent performance overtime and not the burst peak cpu/gpu clock speed. :D
  • testbug00 - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    but, that's not what phones are for???????????
  • kspirit - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    Really? Because gaming and a long browsing session do fall under "performance over time". And that is partially what smartphones are for.
  • Spoelie - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    Long browsing session? Very peaky

    I don't game on my phone either, the most battery sapping situation I tend to be in is: streaming spotify over BT while navigating with google maps (screen on) while serving as a wifi hotspot for someone else in the car.
  • messyOwl - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    You can already get QC 2.0 chargers for the car. This should help mitigate at least that scenario.
  • Flunk - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    Yup, because any sort of long session will run down the battery.
  • niva - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    Browsing sessions should not cause or require peak performance by any means... that's just regular usage of a phone and it certainly shouldn't be running into throttling issues for regular web browsing.
  • messyOwl - Tuesday, May 19, 2015 - link

    GSMArena's review of this phone showed Chrome was less battery hungry than the ASUS Browser app.
    I own the TW version of this phone with the 2.3GHz Z3580. The CPU acts more like Intel speed step in that its reduces the CPU speed when its not needed to conserve power. Here is my top 6 CPUs break down over the last 20 hours. I was asleep for 8 of those hours:
    500MHz 59.68%
    offline 30.85%
    2.33GHz 4.51%
    1.33GHz 1.61%
    583MHz 0.93%
    666MHz 0.37%
  • AnotherGuy - Monday, May 18, 2015 - link

    I wish they made phones of regular size... meaning 5.1" and under, my current Galaxy S5 at 5.1" is more than big enough.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now