Display Measurement

The display on the ROG Phone III is an OLED panel that features a 1080p resolution and a very high refresh-rate of up to 144Hz. Although it was something quite extraordinary back in 2019, in 2020 it’s doesn’t showcase the same kind of spec-list advantage versus the 1440p 120Hz panels by some other competitors in the market.

The phone gives you the options to operate at 60, 90, 120 or 144Hz which is quite wide array of selections. Unfortunately, much like other super-high refresh-rate panels on the market, going beyond 90Hz comes at a quite larger power consumption cost.

Colour settings on the ROG Phone III are very varied and customisable, giving you four different predefined display gamut selections. The “standard” profile is the calibrated sRGB target with a default colour temperature near 6500K, so that’s what we measured and what I would recommend users to choose when looking for accurate display colours.

We move on to the display calibration and fundamental display measurements of the ROG Phone III screen. As always, we thank X-Rite and SpecraCal, as our measurements are performed with an X-Rite i1Pro 2 spectrophotometer, with the exception of black levels which are measured with an i1Display Pro colorimeter. Data is collected and examined using Portrait Display's CalMAN software.

Display Measurement - Maximum Brightness

In terms of brightness, the ROG Phone III fares well, with manual brightness reaching up to around 423cd/m², whilst when in adaptive brightness mode this boosts up to 652cd/m² full-screen white (100% APL) when under bright ambient light conditions.

Portrait Displays CalMAN

In the standard display profile, colour temperature is quite good at the high levels, tracking whites at 6453K. At the mid-levels there’s a bit too much greens.

Although greyscale colour accuracy is quite excellent with a dEITP of only 1.76, the overall error rate when including luminosity is quite bad in our results here, and the reason for that is that the phone is targeting a much higher gamma of around 2.4. Unfortunately this aspect is valid for all colour profiles of the phone and there’s no way to fine-tune or change this.

What this means is that mid- and low-levels will appear darker than they are meant to.

Portrait Displays CalMAN

Saturation accuracy against the sRGB target is excellent, with only minor deviations which are exaggerated by the higher gamma target of the display profile.

Portrait Displays CalMAN

The Gretag MacBeth chart of common colour tones and skin tones is also quite accurate in terms of colour saturations and hues, however the off-target luminosity because of the higher gamma is the main reason the total dEITP error rate is quite high at 8.57.

Overall, the screen of the ROG Phone III is excellent, although not class-leading. It’s not quite as high resolution or as bright as some competitors, but it still fares very well, and it’s currently amongst a very small number of phones which can claim a 144Hz refresh-rate, although the actual benefits of that over 120Hz devices is rather minor.

Colour accuracy is good, although you’d have to get used to that higher gamma target which produces darker colour tones.

GPU Performance & Power Battery Life - The Best
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  • s.yu - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    iPhone batteries are still small for their screen size, while iPad batteries are not.
  • Great_Scott - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    Forget using the phone for games. I'd lock the screen to 60Hz and charge it every other day (every 3rd day?).
  • flyingpants265 - Tuesday, September 1, 2020 - link

    Yeah, the display thing is dumb. Remember when people said over 1080p was a waste for phones? Well.... They were right. And here we go again with the display thing.
  • Kishoreshack - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Always felt Snapdragon Plus versions were a gimmick
    This review proves it
    The plus versions suck a lot of power
  • s.yu - Monday, August 31, 2020 - link

    Not really, it's pretty clear that last year's ROGP2 with 855+ was a notch above the regular 855. Either Asus made a mistake here or 865 doesn't scale as well.
  • Spunjji - Tuesday, September 1, 2020 - link

    Pretty sure it's the fault of the 856+ - they just pushed it further than it really needs to go.
  • Kishoreshack - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Want Anandtech to do more phone reviews
    Many devices are pending
  • Quantumz0d - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    No 3.5mm jack and no SD card slot is a joke on this. Not interested at all, It's just a chastity block with zero freedom.
  • ads295 - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    Agreed, this is one device where even ASUS agreed that size doesn't matter. Such a dumb decision
  • Tchamber - Friday, August 28, 2020 - link

    I hear this a lot, no 3.5 jack means no buy. I love good music, with quality sound, but when I'm on my phone I have given in to the convenience of Bluetooth. And I've been impressed with the audio fidelity some headphones deliver. I have two sets right now, LG Tones, which are really comfortable, and Beats PowerBeats3, which sound amazing, and even deliver nice bass. So I'm wondering, when was the last time you tried Bluetooth? Not to say wireless headphones are as good as wired, but there are some really good options.

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