Conclusion & End Remarks

The Black Shark 2 is actually the first “gaming” phone that I’ve gotten to dedicate a review to. Going into the review I had a few preconceptions of what this means and what the basic checkmarks of what a gaming phone should be and what it should deliver.

First of all, in terms of design, the Black Shark 2 does put a checkmark on its “gaming aesthetics”, and the accentuated modern design elements of the phone very much remind one of the typical gaming products that consumers are accustomed.

The build quality of the phone is excellent and feels very solid; it’s also of a reasonable size and weight – keeping the size in check with delivering a gaming phone experience in a 75mm wide form-factor. 

The Black Shark 2’s 6.39” AMOLED screen is quite adequate and should satisfy most users, albeit it doesn’t showcase any particular strengths and its colour calibration also seems to have larger weaknesses.

The best thing about the display is actually the touch input controller that operates at a higher-than-usual 240Hz, something that’s particularly noticeable in the scrolling latency of content and surely would also help in the touch input latency of games.

On the software side, I wasn’t too convinced of the value of the Shark gaming suite. In essence, it’s just a glorified launcher UI with a lot of gimmicks. The one real benefit I found to be actual a practical feature is the “MasterTouch” feature which allows you to map two pressure sensitive areas on the screen to two new additional adjustable UI functions in a game, essentially enabling you to turn in-game analog sticks to also serve as click-buttons, much like on a real controller joystick.

The cameras on the Black Shark 2 just aren’t very good. I had expected the phone to at least match the very good daylight processing of the Xiaomi Mi9, but alas that’s not the case, and the BS2 just doesn’t offer the same more consistent and superior camera calibration and post processing. It has worse exposure, colour balance, and details, especially on the zoom module that showcases a detrimental contrast and sharpening filter.

In low-light, the phone is actually even worse than the Mi9 due to the fact that it lacks the dedicated night mode. It’s in essence the worst camera I’ve tested in recent years.

A Gaming Phone's Existential Crisis

I mentioned I had preconceptions of what a gaming phone should be able to deliver, and the one aspect that I would value above all others in such a product, is the gaming performance that it's able to deliver.

On the CPU side of things, the BS2 fares quite OK and is about average to a little below average compared to other Snapdragon 855 devices. The benefit of this more conservative tuning is the fact that it does quite well in terms of battery life, and its 4000mAh battery does showcase itself as an advantage compared to other devices.

In terms of gaming/GPU performance, the Black Shark 2 is simply an utter disaster and an embarrassment of a device. The matter of fact here is that the phone ended up with the single worst sustained performance of any Snapdragon 855 phone in the market. The phone’s thermal throttling is very aggressive, and though it’s able to maintain very reasonable skin temperatures, it comes at a great cost of performance.

The problem here is that Xiaomi continues to try to mislead its customers as to the real performance of the phone – the firmware detects benchmarks and disables thermal throttling in order to get better scores. In this scenario of course it showcases excellent performance, but I stopped the phone in its tracks after it had reached an excess of 57°C, at which point it was uncomfortably hot to hold. The issue isn’t new to the Black Shark 2 as last year’s Black Shark behaved the same – showcasing great cheating behaviour while its real performance was just lacklustre.

Here’s the thing, the Black Shark 2 isn’t all that cheap, coming at a minimum of 549€ for the base storage model. For a phone which completely fails at the very thing it’s designed for, I can’t see how one would able to justify its purchase. The cameras are massively underwhelming, and the display is also lacklustre compared to other phones. The only redeeming features of the Black Shark 2 remains its 240Hz touchscreen, the MasterTouch feature, and above-average battery life.

Currently I just don’t see how the BS2 can justify its existence over any other regular non-gaming phone, the compromises and disadvantages vastly outweigh the one or two features which actually do benefit the phone.

Camera - Low Light Evaluation
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  • s.yu - Thursday, September 26, 2019 - link

    I'm quite aware of people who never go for the achievements. When my cousin plays Kingdom Rush he DOESN'T EVEN GO FOR ALL 3 STARS.
    The horror! It's like eating an apple with two or three random bites then throwing away all the rest!
  • StormyParis - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    Reviewing stuff as part of a for-pay arrangement must require very high-level mental, ethics, ... jiu-jitsu. I'm not sure how long the partnership w/Qualcomm will last, but, as a reader, thanks for the heads up.
  • IUU - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    They are trying to imitate Apple. Too much fluff, so people believe they buy a superior device(it is the price too).
    So they hope they can make some profit out of thin air.
    I hope you should be critical of the iphones in this fashion as well.
    They allocate a bigger amount of transistors to the faster cores , so they
    can claim supremacy, no matter the fact that on general cpu performance
    they are about the same.
    No matter that their gpu is anemic and nowhere near snapdragons.
  • melgross - Thursday, September 26, 2019 - link

    Exactly what fluff are you talking about?

    You really are deliberately ignorant.
  • edsib1 - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    Another phone review where the benchmarks are all wrong. Put the phone in game mode - it is easily in the top 5 855 based phones in terms of gaming performance.
  • cfenton - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    But is that because it cheats and runs without any thermal limitations when it's in game mode? Personally, I don't want my phone getting hot enough to be uncomfortable to hold.
  • edsib1 - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    But it doesnt get hot. They run at full tilt and dont throttle.

    Read the other reviews on the internet about these phones. It is Anandtech that is out of step with the other sites.

    The gaming phones are basically running in saver mode - unless you turn game mode on.

    Exactly the same problem with the review of the Oppo Reno 10x zoom....
  • Andrei Frumusanu - Wednesday, September 25, 2019 - link

    > But it doesnt get hot. They run at full tilt and dont throttle.

    I already demonstrated that's not what happens.

    > Exactly the same problem with the review of the Oppo Reno 10x zoom....

    What's the problem? That phone didn't throttle. It had a performance mode but that's essentially just a cheating button and running all frequencies pegged at max.
  • edsib1 - Thursday, September 26, 2019 - link

    Game mode is not a cheating mode if the phone can maintain that speed. If you run CPU throttle on the Oppo for over 10mins the phone maintains a very high score with game mode engaged (around 15% higher than without).

    The Exynos 9820 on the other hard throttles hard after a couple of minutes losing about 25% performance.

    So why would the game mode that doesnt throttle be more of a cheat mode than the 9820 which throttles hard?
  • edsib1 - Thursday, September 26, 2019 - link

    Reviewing a gaming phone without using gaming mode is like testing an Audi RS6 without putting it into sport mode - pointless.

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