GPU Performance & Power

On the GPU side of things, Qualcomm has long been leading the benchmark charts with the help of their in-house Adreno GPU architecture. With the Galaxy S10, we again see a new round of Adreno vs Mali in the Snapdragon and Exynos variants of the phone.

The Adreno 640 in the Snapdragon 855 has relatively conservative performance targets this generation. Here Qualcomm promises 20% better performance even though the GPU itself has a reported 50% more execution units. What has happened is that Qualcomm has dropped the clock frequency from 710MHz down to 585MHz, account for where most of that theoretical GPU performance is missing. The rationale here is to be able to run wider and slower, and thus more efficiently.

On the Exynos side of things, the new chip adopts a new Mali G76MP12 GPU clocked in at up to 702MHz. We’re already seen the GPU inside of the Kirin 980, however for whatever reason Samsung S.LSI has always been able to achieve better results than HiSilicon for several generations in a row, so it’ll be interesting to see how these two chipsets differ.

Starting off with the 3Dmark Sling Shot Extreme Unlimited test suite, the Physics workload is mostly a CPU bound test within a GPU thermally constrained scenario.

3DMark Sling Shot 3.1 Extreme Unlimited - Physics

The Exynos 9820 surprisingly takes the performance lead between both Galaxy S10 units. The result here is a very big change compared to previous generation Exynos SoCs. I hadn’t had the time to investigate if this is actually caused by improvements of the new M4 core or if the workload is being scheduled on the A75 cores. Both peak performance and sustained performance here are very good and are only beaten by Kirin 980 devices.

The Snapdragon 855 Galaxy S10 also posts excellent peak perf results, however the CPU seem to throttle quite a bit more, falling in line with what last year’s Snapdragon 845 devices were scoring.

3DMark Sling Shot 3.1 Extreme Unlimited - Graphics 

In the Graphics score of the workload, we come back to the familiar dominance of Qualcomm GPUs. What is interesting to see here is that both Galaxy S10 units sport worse sustained performance than the Note9 with last year’s chipsets. Most likely this is due to different thermal limits on these two Samsung devices.

GFXBench Aztec Ruins - High - Vulkan/Metal - Off-screen GFXBench Aztec Ruins - Normal - Vulkan/Metal - Off-screen

In the new GFXBench Aztec Ruins tests, the Exynos unit takes the lead in terms of sustained performance in the High variant test, only beaten by Apple’s newest iPhones. The phone doesn’t seem to reproduce the same lead in the Normal variant and subsequently slightly trails the Snapdragon 855 version. In sustained performance, the Exynos S10 beats last year’s predecessors, however the Qualcomm chip merely matches some of the better Snapdragon 845 devices from last year.

GFXBench Manhattan 3.1 Off-screen

In Manhattan 3.1 Off-screen, we see both S10’s neck-in-neck in peak performance, and sustained performance also doesn’t seem all that different. The Exynos variant again shows big leaps over last year’s G72MP18 GPU, and the Qualcomm variant again is only able to match or actually lose out to some of the more thermally aggressive Snapdragon 845 units from last year.

GFXBench Manhattan 3.1 Offscreen Power Efficiency
(System Active Power)
  Mfc. Process FPS Avg. Power
(W)
Perf/W
Efficiency
iPhone XS (A12) Warm 7FF 76.51 3.79 20.18 fps/W
iPhone XS (A12) Cold / Peak 7FF 103.83 5.98 17.36 fps/W
Galaxy 10+ (Snapdragon 855) 7FF 70.67 4.88 14.46 fps/W
Galaxy 10+ (Exynos 9820) 8LPP 68.87 5.10 13.48 fps/W
Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon 845) 10LPP 61.16 5.01 11.99 fps/W
Huawei Mate 20 Pro (Kirin 980) 7FF 54.54 4.57 11.93 fps/W
Galaxy S9 (Exynos 9810) 10LPP 46.04 4.08 11.28 fps/W
Galaxy S8 (Snapdragon 835) 10LPE 38.90 3.79 10.26 fps/W
LeEco Le Pro3 (Snapdragon 821) 14LPP 33.04 4.18 7.90 fps/W
Galaxy S7 (Snapdragon 820) 14LPP 30.98 3.98 7.78 fps/W
Huawei Mate 10 (Kirin 970) 10FF 37.66 6.33 5.94 fps/W
Galaxy S8 (Exynos 8895) 10LPE 42.49 7.35 5.78 fps/W
Galaxy S7 (Exynos 8890) 14LPP 29.41 5.95 4.94 fps/W
Meizu PRO 5 (Exynos 7420) 14LPE 14.45 3.47 4.16 fps/W
Nexus 6P (Snapdragon 810 v2.1) 20Soc 21.94 5.44 4.03 fps/W
Huawei Mate 8 (Kirin 950) 16FF+ 10.37 2.75 3.77 fps/W
Huawei Mate 9 (Kirin 960) 16FFC 32.49 8.63 3.77 fps/W
Huawei P9 (Kirin 955) 16FF+ 10.59 2.98 3.55 fps/W

Looking at the power consumption and efficiency tables in Manhattan 3.1, we see both devices showcase quite similar characteristics. Performance is very close in both chipsets, with also very similar power consumption within 220mW of each other. The efficiency also is quite close to each other. Interestingly both Qualcomm and Samsung weren’t able to close the gap to Apple’s latest iPhones and the A12 which still has a considerable performance and power efficiency lead.

For the Exynos chipset, it’s also unfortunate to see that absolute power has gone up by 1W, meaning the device will heat up faster, even though performance and efficiency is better.

GFXBench T-Rex 2.7 Off-screen

In T-Rex we again see both chipsets perform very similarly with similar sustained performance figures.

GFXBench T-Rex Offscreen Power Efficiency
(System Active Power)
  Mfc. Process FPS Avg. Power
(W)
Perf/W
Efficiency
iPhone XS (A12) Warm 7FF 197.80 3.95 50.07 fps/W
iPhone XS (A12) Cold / Peak 7FF 271.86 6.10 44.56 fps/W
Galaxy 10+ (Snapdragon 855) 7FF 167.16 4.10 40.70 fps/W
Galaxy S9+ (Snapdragon 845) 10LPP 150.40 4.42 34.00 fps/W
Galaxy 10+ (Exynos 9820) 8LPP 166.00 4.96 33.40fps/W
Galaxy S9 (Exynos 9810) 10LPP 141.91 4.34 32.67 fps/W
Galaxy S8 (Snapdragon 835) 10LPE 108.20 3.45 31.31 fps/W
Huawei Mate 20 Pro (Kirin 980) 7FF 135.75 4.64 29.25 fps/W
LeEco Le Pro3 (Snapdragon 821) 14LPP 94.97 3.91 24.26 fps/W
Galaxy S7 (Snapdragon 820) 14LPP 90.59 4.18 21.67 fps/W
Galaxy S8 (Exynos 8895) 10LPE 121.00 5.86 20.65 fps/W
Galaxy S7 (Exynos 8890) 14LPP 87.00 4.70 18.51 fps/W
Huawei Mate 10 (Kirin 970) 10FF 127.25 7.93 16.04 fps/W
Meizu PRO 5 (Exynos 7420) 14LPE 55.67 3.83 14.54 fps/W
Nexus 6P (Snapdragon 810 v2.1) 20Soc 58.97 4.70 12.54 fps/W
Huawei Mate 8 (Kirin 950) 16FF+ 41.69 3.58 11.64 fps/W
Huawei P9 (Kirin 955) 16FF+ 40.42 3.68 10.98 fps/W
Huawei Mate 9 (Kirin 960) 16FFC 99.16 9.51 10.42 fps/W

In the power end efficiency tables we however see a big difference between the two devices. Here Qualcomm is able to clearly achieve lower power and higher efficiency than the Exynos.

One thing that I note on both Galaxy S10 units is that I again saw some very odd thermal behaviour on the part of the Qualcomm unit. Just like we measured on the Note9 a few months ago, the Qualcomm Galaxy S10+ reached much higher initial temperatures than the Exynos S10+. I measured peak skin temperatures on the front screen near the SoC nearing 49°C on the S855 unit while the E9820 peaked around 43°C. Again, much like last year, this seems to be a time-bound boost mechanism as after a certain period of around 20 minutes the Snapdragon unit throttles down to a sustained 42-43°C. What this means is that the Snapdragon unit has higher (longer) peak performance figures at a cost of a hotter device, before both devices equalise at a sustained ~42°C.

Overall, the Snapdragon unit this year does still have a performance and efficiency lead, however the gap has been narrowed compared to what we’ve seen in the past years. The new Mali G76 looks to have made solid improvements, and ALU heavy workloads in particular have seen very large leaps compared to the Exynos 9810.

The Adreno 640 this generation just seems quite conservative – Apple has taken Qualcomm’s performance crown in mobile and most importantly also the efficiency crown. Both the Snapdragon 855 and A12 are both manufactured on the same process node so it’s a valid Dragon-to-Apples comparison, and here Qualcomm is beaten by such a significant margin of which in the past we’ve only been used to seeing Qualcomm beat Arm with. For the next generation, we thus hope both Qualcomm and Arm will be able to show more significant jumps in both performance and efficiency. Samsung’s own GPU is also a wildcard, however I’m not expecting to see this productised in next year’s Exynos.

System Performance Display Measurement
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  • Thraxen - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    I’m in that customization category and also not technically naive so avoiding any security issues is, well, as natural as not falling for e-mail scams. Anyway, I’m typing this reply on my iPad Pro and like it quite a bit, but compared to my S10 it’s boring as hell. The phone just feels more exciting while the iPad feels... safe? Like it was jointly produced by Fisher Price or something.
  • jaju123 - Sunday, March 31, 2019 - link

    Lol, I have the same experience. The iPad pro 11 that I have is like a kids version of what a mobile OS should be. I can barely do anything on it, whereas android on my mate 20 pro feels like an OS for adults.
  • Thraxen - Sunday, March 31, 2019 - link

    Exactly. I love customizing my phone. I can add widgets (real ones, not that card BS on iOS), change the screen grid layout, change all the icons or just one, use live wall papers (real ones, not that handful of very limited ones on iOS), add automation with apps like Tasker, change the dialer/contacts/etc apps, change how notification functions, etc, etc, etc...

    If there’s something you don’t like how it works or looks on Android there’s a very good chance you can change it. On iOS everything is Apple’s way. And I get the logic there. Apple is big on having a very consistent user experience. But for someone like me it’s painfully boring. Everyone’s iOS devices look the same. So one hand it means you are immediately comfortable using any iOS devices, but on the other it’s like living in one of those neighborhoods where the boulder used the same floor plan for every house. It’s soul sucking boring.
  • Speedfriend - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    I use a iPhone and Android daily, and despite benchmarks saying that my iPhone 7 is much faster than my pixel 2 XL, in reality it is slower, takes longer to log into new WiFi, kills apps in the background and takes far worse photos. Plus it is loaded with bloatware I can't even remove off the home screen and can't even rearrange the home screen with icons at the bottom.
  • Wardrive86 - Friday, March 29, 2019 - link

    This is absolutely true. My job always upgrades me to the latest Iphone and Ipad. After having multiple generations of Iphone, browser performance is not as good as benchmarks suggest. Personal and work are always on the same network either WiFi or Verizon.
  • GekkePrutser - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That's because Apple skimps so much on memory. They make great SoCs but their memory skimping hurts the overall experience by killing off apps in the background too much. Especially after one or two iOS updates it becomes really bad.
  • Irish910 - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That’s just a blatant lie. I used an iPhone 7 Plus for almost 2 years and the thing was hella fast. Using my XS Max I can barely see a speed difference under most circumstances. The only thing that might seem “faster” is the non animations of apps in android. iOS is much more fluid and smooth. But memory, chipset and software, the iPhone should be faster.
  • arayoflight - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    That applies only to the US. The iPhones are much, much more expensive outside of US. In my country, the 128GB S10+ costs less than the base 64GB iPhone XR (yes, the XR). If you are going to get comparable, even the base XS max costs about 1.5x of the S10+, and comes with half the storage to boot.

    Not to mention that Apple phones don't work that well outside US as well. There are no ubiquitous Apple stores which fix your problems immediately, Apple maps doesn't work well, or siri with non-US accents. You can't disable or set defaults to google assistant or google maps or chrome as well, so good luck. Also, the rest of the world doesn't use imessage, but WhatsApp.

    iPhones are a much worse deal outside of US, They have excellent performance and displays yes, but they aren't excellent value for the atrocious prices you pay.
  • cha0z_ - Tuesday, April 9, 2019 - link

    This, when I got my (sadly exynos as EU) note 9 it was HALF the price of the XS max 256GB at my carrier both and with deal. I literally could take two note 9 instead of a single xs max 256GB. Even if we argue that the xs max is a better phone (tho in reality it has it's + and - compared to the note 9), is it two times the price better? Had the money to buy both, but tbh I like android generally more. Tho I must admit that the iphones are a lot a lot smoother... got iphone 6s too and it's smoother than the note 9 and that's not exactly making me happy. :D
  • id4andrei - Saturday, March 30, 2019 - link

    You keep saying Android's security problems like it's an axiom. You're just as safe with a high end Android device like you are with an iphone. Android does not have ads. Tracking can be disabled or enabled with as much ease as on ios.

    Stop spreading bullshit. You are tracked and monetized on ios via 3rd parties just like on Android. Ios gathers data about you just like Android.

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