Samsung Galaxy S10e Review: Why Not? By Marques Brownlee

By Marques Brownlee
Aug 14, 2021
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Samsung Galaxy S10e Review: Why Not?

Hey, what's up guys I'm Kip END here, and this is the Samsung Galaxy S 10 II, with a lowercase e little note. The e stands for officially and the Galaxy S 10. It might not be a better phone on paper than the S 10 and s 10 plus, but I can definitely say now that I've used it that it is a better deal. It's kind of a direct answer to the iPhone 10 are they're, not hiding that in any way like it's the same price but hardware wise, it's kind of a step-up in every direction that isn't battery. So it kind of got me thinking why not just get the S 10 e, so the best way to explain the S 10 you used to tell you what's different versus the regular S 10 I'll link the S 10 review right here or below the like button for those who haven't seen it already, but it's a very similar phone. This is everything that's different, so the big three are the cameras, the fingerprint reader, the new display and the price.

It's 750 bucks now by the way I feel like. We need a new name for this, like this $750 price, because it's not budget, but it's above mid-range still ?, but it's also below flagships like the flagships are like $900,000, so it's above mid-range. So it's like a premium mid-range like a mid-range premium. Okay, so the cameras s10 II, has the exact same primary camera and the exact same ultra-wide camera as the s10. It's just missing the extra telephoto camera.

Honestly, that's been totally fine. I, don't really miss it at all. Zoomed in photos will now be digital zoom, instead of switching to the telephoto camera, and that's alright with me and keeping the ultra-wide camera is sweet. That's the new camera for the Samsung phones this year and, like I, said in the review it's by far the most fun. It is still a bit softer and a bit more over processed in those photos than the main camera, definitely not as crispy, but this is something software updates will continue to improve.

So that's that with the camera other than that same really, good camera, as we've had in the s10. So then the fingerprint reader instead of an ultrasonic fingerprint reader underneath the glass. This s10 has a good old classic, capacitive fingerprint reader on the button on the right side of the phone and coming back from the s10 to using this again man, it's really easy to forget how good we got at this type of fingerprint reader. It kind of became the gold standard before we started moving on from them, and we wanted all the screen space. So we started putting them on the back of the phone on the side, but these fingerprint readers are really fast.

This one here on the s10 II is just about one of the fastest fingerprint readers I've ever used, and there are others that are this fast, but it just feels so much faster. Coming from the s, tens all true, sonic reader. It is way faster than that now for placement. It is in the power button on the top right hand, side, but the power button is still also kind of high up on the side of this phone. Now, since the phone is smaller, it's not as big of a deal and with bigger hands, it's even less of a big deal, but just a little lower of a button that would have been perfect.

So the reader is basically in a natural resting position for righties or for people who hold the phone in their right hand, and on top of that, there's even a gesture in the settings that you can turn on where you can now swipe down to pull down the notification shade so that the favorite reader becomes a sort of gesture pad, and it's super responsive, maybe even too sensitive. You can sort of do it by accident, a bunch if you're, not careful, but once you get used to it. It's super useful to not have to reach up to the top of the phone every single time. So, basically, you pick up the phone and you just sort of hold it in a natural resting position, get instantly unlocks, and then you have access to the notifications. Just like that.

I mean it's not as technologically cool as the under glass ultrasonic fingerprint reader, but you could argue it's actually better than what you get on the s10 and some already have. So that brings us to the last but not least, important difference the display. So the s10 has the smallest display in the new lineup. It's a 5.8-inch screen. It's still weird, to call a 5.8 inch display small, but it's true, and it's still dynamic, AMOLED still a sharp high resolution. Furthermore, it's 20 to 80 by 1080 still has a hole, punch cut out in the top corner.

That makes for amazing wallpapers, of course, and still super bright and color accurate as you'd expect from a Samsung panel. The difference is its flat, so it's a flat screen now, instead of bleeding over the edges. So with that, you end up with slightly thicker more noticeable side bezels, but like barely, and it's all relative still look next to an iPhone 10s. Remember Apple had all that talk about curving the OLED display to get the chin thinner and to get the edges all really close s.10 e has the same sized side bezels and the chin, maybe two or three millimeters taller. So that's the esthetic difference.

Also, one thing I noticed is the S 10 e. Doesn't let you choose your displays screen resolution like the bigger s, 10 does, and I'm not actually sure why I would guess it has something to do with the gentile display matrix they're using, but either way it's kind of set and forget out the box anyway, and it looks great so assuming you don't hate the hole punch. This is still a fantastic display, other little things, six gigs of ram in the base model, instead of eight, not really a huge deal, I think it was if it was for your know, thanks to my concerns with the pixel I would probably be also concerned about this, but six gigs of RAM still seems like enough, and you get eight on the upgraded model. So it's pretty close. Oh, the battery is slightly smaller, its 3100 William hours instead of the larger ones on the larger phones, but it's also a smaller display.

As you know, that's the biggest power draw, so this is still a pretty great battery life phone and then the color. So as long as we're drawing parallels to the iPhone 10 are, you might have noticed, the es10 has a bit more color than the s 10. So there's the glass on the back. This is flamingo pink. So if you're, the type to rock your phone naked, you can enjoy having an extremely bright phone.

Even honestly, even the red monitor sensor and all my coloring ability, through your screen, probably won't do it justice, it's really pink, but not only that the aluminum rails are colorized a little. So you have matching sides, it's more toned down than the back, but you can see it from the sides of the phone and then even in the camera module, unlike the s10, they colored that metal in there as well. So it's a small touch black on the s10 color on the s10 II, but that that's basically it for this phone. Those are the differences for 750 bucks so again on paper. Is that a better phone? No, but it is a better deal matter of fact feature for feature as far as hardware, what you get and with a much better display and a headphone jack, and all these other things ultra-wide camera I.

Think it's a better deal than the iPhone 10 are now for a lot of people that won't even matter because they just want another iPhone, but if you're not too tied into the ecosystem yet or if you're looking to get out of it, then why not that's tiny? Okay here you should buy the bigger higher-end phone if you need the ultrasonic fingerprint reader or the infinity display or the 2x telephoto camera or if you just have a bigger, $200 hole burning in your pocket other than that galaxy s, 10a is probably the one most people should get either way. That's been it thanks for watching catch. You guys in the next one peace.


Source : Marques Brownlee

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