System & CPU Performance

The Nexus 6P comes with a Snapdragon 810 designed by Qualcomm. This is a big.LITTLE 4x A53 @ 1.55GHz + 4x A57 @ 1.95GHz SoC. As we’ve hopefully come to be very familiar with the chipset over the last couple of months, the key characteristics with which the 6P can differentiate itself from other Snapdragon 810 devices is through software optimizations. In particular the fact that the Nexus 6P comes with Android 6.0 Marshmallow should allow it to be able to showcase some improvements which we’ll dive into a bit later.

First we start by comparing performance of some of our browser-based benchmarks. These are predominantly Javascript tests which require large single-core performance out of the device’s SoCs.

Kraken 1.1 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

In Kraken the Nexus 6P is able to showcase a very good score that’s only beat by, oddly enough, the LG G4. As we’ve come to discover over the past year OEM browser libraries play a large role in device performance, even though we’re using the same Chrome build across different devices we see large differences in performance even within devices who employ the same SoC. It’s relatively unnerving to see this fragmentation in the ecosystem and in particular Chrome performing so differently across devices.

Google Octane v2  (Chrome/Safari/IE)

In Octane the Nexus 6P again performs very well, this time again beating our other devices such as the HTC One M9 or the Xiaomi Mi Note Pro. Among Android devices, only the Galaxy Note 5 - which on Octane is able to show equal performance as it does in its optimized stock browser - is able to beat it.

WebXPRT 2015 (Chrome/Safari/IE)

On WebXPRT again we see the 6P performs extremely well among Android devices, only being able to be beat by Samsung’s Exynos 7420 devices in the stock browser.

Continuing onto our system benchmarks, we start with Basemark OS II 2.0 from Basemark (formerly Rightware).

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Web

In the web test the Nexus 6P is yet again found at the high-end of the charts as it is able to provide good numbers. As we’ve seen in reviews such as on the Mate S it’s not necessarily raw performance that is demanded in these tests but also performance latency which plays a big role.

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Graphics

The graphics sub-test of Basemark has always been kind to the Adreno GPU so here again we see the Nexus 6P perform well, although not quite up to par with the other Snapdragon 810 devices we’ve tested in the past.

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Memory

The Nexus 6P comes in a surprising first place on Basemark OS’s memory test. Again this is a mainly NAND-limited test but in contrast to our other synthetic test, performance and access patterns try to simulate more real-world applications.

Basemark OS II 2.0 - System

While the other tests try to test more realistic workloads, the system benchmark is all about measuring peak performance in a given set of scenarios. Here the Nexus 6P fares similarly to the Xiaomi Mi Note Pro but falls behind Exynos 7420 devices such as the Note 5.

Basemark OS II 2.0 - Overall

While I’m not a great fan of overall aggregate benchmark scores, we still see the Nexus 6P among the top of today’s currently available Android devices.

Moving on to PCMark from Futuremark, we’ll use a suite of tests that not only try to mimic real-world usage patterns, but actually make use of APIs that we currently find in use by many day-to-day applications.

Starting with the web browsing test we find the application use Android’s built-in WebView container which relies on OS-dependent components.

PCMark - Web Browsing

Here we see the Nexus 6P lead performance, slightly beating the Note 5. We’re also likely seeing advantages due to Android 6.0 as the Mi Note Pro, our other device with the Snapdragon 810 lags over a thousand points behind.

PCMark - Video Playback

On the video playback score the Nexus 6P comes in towards the middle of the pack. The video test is a benchmark of both the video decoding hardware and software layers of the device, as well as the NAND speed, as fast seeking through the video is performed to test out how rapidly the device can resume playback.

PCMark - Writing

Now onto the writing test we come to one of the larger mysteries of the new Nexus 6’s performance. Both the Nexus 5X and the 6P seem to have large issues with PCMark’s writing test. The test itself consist of text manipulation and some file I/O, but most importantly it’s that this is purely a Java based test. Due to the way Android is architected, this means the code is handled and executed by the Android RunTime (ART). Futuremark have done a fantastic job in creating a test-case which is very sensitive to performance differences in the runtime.

At first when seeing these scores I thought that this was a side-effect of Android 6.0’s new big.LITTLE optimizations (which we’ll get back to in a later section), but even after turning those settings off the scores remained the same. After testing some other Java-based benchmarks I came to the conclusion that this has to be a software issue.

PCMark - Photo Editing

The photo editing uses RenderScript kernels to apply image processing on a set of pictures. With help of a powerful GPU the Nexus 6P performs top of the class

PCMark - Work Performance Overall

Due to the disappointing writing sub-score the Nexus 6P ends up third in the overall PCMark work performance score. Nevertheless, this is a good showing for the Snapdragon 810 device as it manages to slightly beat the Mi Note Pro and the HTC One M9.

Software UI, NAND & WiFi Performance GPU Performance & Device Thermals
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  • Ethos Evoss - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    it is done on purpose to slag on the phone unfortunately ..
  • Ethos Evoss - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6GBNdSrv2I
  • Ethos Evoss - Sunday, December 20, 2015 - link

    https://www.google.co.uk/#q=galaxy+s6+edge+battery...
  • ACE76 - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    The S6 is honestly a bad phone...Samsung is certainly getting better but their software implementation is still horrible...HTC is by far the best at doing a custom Android setup while Motorola and Sony are best at keeping things close to stock Android....Samsung, for some odd reason, still thinks it has a better grasp at how to customize Android when it's clear customers want a closer to stock experience...they've also chose not to be developer friendly at all, which is terrible.
  • R. Hunt - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    Lol, the S6 a bad phone...

    Also, speak for yourself. I don't want the stock experience at all.
  • Anustart - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    Lol @ 6s not selling well. Don't be a dummy.
  • Speedfriend - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    Kantar Worldpanel reporting that sales volumes for the three onths ending October were down 25% on last year in the US. And not only that, the 6s was 24% of slaes, whereas the 6 was 33% of sales for the same period last year.

    So yes, the 6s is not selling as well as the 6 did and well below expectations. Dummy
  • V900 - Wednesday, December 16, 2015 - link

    We have no reason to believe that Anustart is a dummy.

    You however, display the intellectual capacity and reasoning of a full blown idiot.

    You use Kantar Worldpanel figures August-October to claim that The iPhone 6s doesnt sell well?

    Hate to crush your hopes, but the 6s was released on the 25th of September, which means that it was only for sale around a third of that entire quarter. The iPhone 6 however, came out on the 19th of September, and therefore had almost a week more to sell in, which makes your assertion very dubious.

    Especially since the 6s beat the iPhone 6 sales figures on the 1st weekend of availability.
  • Speedfriend - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    Both the 6 and 6s were available to pre-order from the 12th of September, hence were on sale for the same amount of time. In fact if you look at the Kantar data, it is clear that the slowdown has happened in October and not September anyway.

    The 6s beat the 6 on the first weekend of availbilty becuase it was launched in China unlike the 6 which had only been luanched in China on 17 October 2014.

    You may notice as well I was referring to US data.

    Who is the full blown idiot now. Maybe learn to read and do some research.
  • fanofanand - Thursday, December 17, 2015 - link

    V900 got SERVED. Sorry just watched a marathon of South Park episodes.....but seriously folks should be a little slower to insult others, all too often you look the fool.

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