Final Thoughts

2018 has been a very successful year for Qualcomm and the Snapdragon 845. The company had provided an extremely solid and well-rounded SoC for device vendors to build their flagship devices on- and by the looks of it the Snapdragon 855 continues this trend.

I’ve been a bit sceptical about the merits of Qualcomm’s 1+3 CPU configuration, however after seeing the preliminary performance and power efficiency figures of the new prime core on the new chipset, I’m not nearly as concerned. We reserve any final verdict for when we will have tested final commercial devices, as that’s where in the end we’ll also see the efficiency effect of the non-prime cores, and how they’ll position themselves against the competition.

Performance wise, the Snapdragon 855 is a bit odd. In steady-state workloads like SPEC the chipset is seemingly performing very well and matches or exceeds the new Kirin 980. Here Qualcomm’s changes to the CPU microarchitecture might even actually be visible in the test results, which is a nice feat. Unfortunately the memory subsystem still seems to include some of DRAM latency regressions that we also saw in the Snapdragon 845, both which are due to Qualcomm’s system level cache.

Real-world performance, while still excellent, doesn’t quite manage to reach my expectations I had for the chipset. Here for whatever reason, the chip’s improvements are not nearly as pronounced as in the more synthetic tests. Again the odd thing is that the Kirin 980 still manages to beat the Snapdragon 855 in near most of these workloads. Qualcomm had reasoned that the microarchitectural changes to the CPU were meant to help web browser performance, yet it’s here where the chip slightly lags behind the competition – I do wonder if this is a case of the CPU again being limited by either Qualcomm’s choice of more conservative caches or due to the latency penalty of the system cache.

Although the performance shown today is exemplary, it still does look maybe a little rough around the edges in some of our system performance tests – here maybe Qualcomm will be able to investigate and further improve things until we actually see commercial devices.

Whether the system performance will be improved in final devices or not, what is clear though is that power efficiency looks outstanding. Qualcomm had me worried as the PR teams had avoided talking about efficiency during the chipset’s launch, but the results today (even if they’ll need to be verified), look very promising and should result in notable battery life improvements in 2019’s devices.

On the GPU side of things, Qualcomm’s more muted performance projections of 20% were because the company has again focused a good part of the process improvements into bringing the overall power back down from the usually higher levels that we saw on the Snapdragon 845.

Overall – the Snapdragon 855 looks to be another extremely well executed SoC from Qualcomm, and I’m looking forward to validating the results and testing out the first commercial devices once they become available.

GPU Performance - Returning To Lower Power
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  • Midwayman - Wednesday, January 16, 2019 - link

    People would have said that about AMD not long ago.... Just saying.
  • 29a - Wednesday, January 16, 2019 - link

    They used the same engineer, Jim Keller. He works for Intel now.
  • Midwayman - Wednesday, January 16, 2019 - link

    Eventually, sure. Apple will stall out on process related stuff eventually and they'll have a chance to catch up. Unlikely until then as they're still making big gains too and have a 2-3 year lead.
  • jjj - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    We need a bit more on the GPU side in the next years for foldable. Pixel count will increase, SoC power needs to decrease (more power and mechanical volume goes towards the display) and mobile gaming should gain in popularity with x2+ larger displays.
  • levizx - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    We can establish that single core performance/power is good, but what about multi-core? Wouldn't the other 3 big core be running at the highest voltage while potentially running at ~2GHz in real world workload?
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    Correct. We'll have to see how efficiency performs once we get commercial devices.
  • Chaser - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    We read about all this when the 845 was about to launch a year ago. I didn't see some monumental improvement in responsiveness or efficiency despite all these whitepapers stating so. Unless you are so kind of smartphone gaming fanatic, real-world use differences between each year look great mostly on paper.
  • SquarePeg - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    Performance has been good enough since 2013 with the release of the SD 800. Every year we get a performance bump that just gets offset by feature bloat that doesn't really improve performance outside of benchmarks. I can pull out my old LG G2 running an Android 4.4.2 custom ROM/kernel and that thing just flies compared to any phone from the past year.
  • A5 - Tuesday, January 15, 2019 - link

    I promise you it won’t. SD 800 will feel terrible
  • yeeeeman - Wednesday, January 16, 2019 - link

    I have a Z3 compact, which is a SD801. Bought recently a Galaxy S7 second hand to replace the Z3. I can safely say that the Exynos 8890 is noticeably faster in opening apps, playing intensive games and generally in multitasking. Z3 usually lags when phone is started for first time and many apps sync. Galaxy S7 is buttery smooth. So yeah, I think we can feel the progress in performance of these chips, but maybe at a later point when apps get to their limit of computing power. Then you actually see that a newer chipset is noticeably faster.
    But nevertheless, the Z3 compact with SD801 is still a great fast phone. It runs a bit slower than the Exynos as I said but in general it is not slow at all on Android 6.0. So yeah, a chipset like it could be easily used in today's times if you don't a bit of slow down here and there.

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