iPhone Xs Max vs Note 9 Speedtest! Fortnite, PUBG Mobile, Geekbench tested! By GizmoSlipTech

By GizmoSlipTech
Aug 21, 2021
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iPhone Xs Max vs Note 9 Speedtest! Fortnite, PUBG Mobile, Geekbench tested!

What's up and welcome to another episode of gizmos live tech. Today, we're looking at the speed test between the legendary Galaxy Note 9 and the new legend incoming potential champ, the iPhone 10s max. Now this note 9 features the snapdragon 845 processors, with the Adrian 630 GPU, with 8 gigs of ram and 512 gigs of storage. Now there is a version of the Galaxy Note, 9 that comes with the Enos processor, which has a better overall Geek bench score, but for everyone, that's in the US. Like me, these are the two phones that need to be compared, and then we have the iPhone Tennis Max, which features the a12 Bionic chip, which is just a freaking powerhouse in both synthetic benchmarks and in real life tests. So far, this is gonna, be my test.

Comparing the Snapdragon 845 in the Galaxy Note, 9 versus the a12 Bionic we're doing five daily use, apps that I use on a daily basis, and then we're also going to test five of my favorite games and see how long it takes for them to load in, and then we're going to add up the total time for all 10 of these apps, as well as compared Geek bench scores without further ado. Let's hop right into this speed test. Okay, so we're restarting both of these phones to make sure that they have fresh memory with no apps open. Here we go we're gonna start by opening up, YouTube really close, but definitely the note 9 was a hair ahead. Instagram really close once again note 9 again edging out Twitter note 9 open once again now we're going to go ahead and open Netflix, note nine once again and now for my fitness pal really close, barely a microsecond ahead.

For the note nine, though, going to open up fortnight now, we did five regular apps we're going to see how these gaming apps handle. This is where I believe the iPhone 10 will get an advantage. We'll have to see the a12 bionics should be a lot better, pulling up 3d resources and is just a much more powerful GPU in general, so it's going to be able to load into the game a lot quicker. We've been in the game now for a number of seconds. This is a huge victory for the iPhone, not even close.

Okay, there, you go massive victory for the iPhone. In that case, here we go. Loading pub, G Mobile looks like the iPhone is winning so far now I phone this in the iPhone was fully loaded in before the note 9 was even passed, the intro screen and there it is alright. So we're going to go ahead and test see which one loads up hearthstone faster nice go to vainglory now and three two ones. Oh, no note 9 actually won the menu load up this time.

It's the first game. It's won so far. Now we're going to load up modern, combat versus once again the iPhone wins, the 3d assets, loading, competition, jeez and there it is last but not least, Geek bench, for let's go ahead and run this in three two one looks like the iPhone 10 finished. First, with a score of 4769 for single core and at 11,000 323 multi-core score. That is really, really good.

Well, there you go. Those scores are right in line with where these phones should be at for their Geek bench scores. Now, after all of these tests, which of these devices still have their apps in memory, let's go ahead and go back through modern combat versus looks like they both are still in memory for modern, combat versus that's fantastic vainglory, we're still in memory regardless with hearthstone. You have to load in every single time. You cannot maintain memory with hearthstone, so hearthstone is discarded anyway, pub G Mobile looks like we're still in memory for both of this fortnight, we're still a memory for the iPhone 10s, but we are not in the memory still for the note 9, which doesn't make any sense at all, because the note 9 has so much more memory.

This has 8 gigs of memory. This is a 512 gig of the note 9, let's check my fitness pal, that's still open. My guess is the video RAM ran out running these for high-performance 3d titles, and they had to remove Fortnight from running in the background. I, don't know it's really weird Netflix is still up for both of them. Twitter is still up for both of them.

Instagram is still up for both of them and YouTube is still up for both of them. Okay, so there's the test. Let's go ahead and take a look at the results for the first five daily use. Apps the note nine really excelled here. It opened every single app faster than the iPhone tennis max now the 10s max wasn't far behind in this daily news.

Apps usually trailing by about a second to a second and a half depending on the app, but when it came down to the 3d app load times, not only to the iPhone 10s max make up the time it lost in the daily use apps, but it far exceeded the note 9, with these heavy 3d applications for total time. The iPhone 10s max made it in one minute. Forty-two point five seconds: well, the note 9 managed two minutes and thirty-three point nine seconds so to wrap this all up and put a nice bow on it. The iPhone 10s max really shows off its raw power in the Geek bench score, as well as its overall speed test time. It really outperforms the note 9, especially in heavy 3d application load times, and that's especially true because of its single core performance.

But the interesting thing is: if you tend to not play a lot of games or do a lot of heavy lifting on your phone, then the note 9 actually might be speedier, depending on what task you're doing. Overall, both of these phones are fantastic performers in day-to-day use, but when it comes to heavy 3d applications and gaming, the iPhone 10s max really shines. That's it for this episode of gizmos left tech. We'll see you guys in the next one Brandon out.


Source : GizmoSlipTech

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