iPad&iPhone user

iPhone 12 versus the best Android phones

Apple’s tweaks, refinement­s, and enhancemen­ts add up to the best iPhone and smartphone value ever.

- Michael Simon reports

2020 was a wild and unpredicta­ble year for smartphone­s. Samsung started the year by shipping its most expensive phone ever in the S20 Ultra and finished with one of its best bargains in the Galaxy S20 FE. Google dropped its flagship Pixel 5 to the midrange and delivered its best design ever, while a OnePlus phone topped a grand for the first time. Plus Apple shipped its smallest iPhone since the iPhone 5. And everything came with 5G on board.

But amid all that, which phone emerged from the chaos as the champion of 2020?

THE PHONES

Samsung Galaxy Note20 Ultra: The Galaxy Note20 Ultra is Samsung’s best phone to date even if it has a slightly inferior camera and a smaller battery than the S20 Ultra.

OnePlus 8 Pro: OnePlus went all out on its phones this year, attacking both the high end and the low end with more models than ever before. Even with the 8T arriving months later, the 8 Pro is my pick of the litter, especially at its newly reduced price tag.

Google Pixel 5: Google did an about-face with its smartphone­s this year, but the Pixel 5 is still among the best Android phone, thanks to Android 11.

iPhone 12: You can make an argument that the £999 iPhone 12 Pro is worth the extra money, but unless you’re taking a lot of zoomed shots, the iPhone 12 is the sweet spot.

DESIGN

The phones here might not fold or swivel, but that doesn’t mean they don’t each have their own unique identities. Their respective wheels most certainly haven’t been reinvented, but each phone has enough little touches to both separate it from the others and raise it above the rest of the pack.

First, let’s look at the size and screen proportion­s.

Dimensions

Note20 Ultra: 164.8x77.2x8.1mm

OnePlus 8 Pro: 165.3x74.3x8.5mm

iPhone 12: 146.7x71.5x7.4mm

Pixel 5: 144.7x70.4x8mm

Screen to body ratio

Note20 Ultra: 91.63%

OnePlus 8 Pro: 90.79%

iPhone 12: 87.45%

Pixel 5: 86.75%

The Note20 Ultra is unmistakab­ly Samsung, with a giant curved Infinity display, hole-punch selfie cam, and very skinny bezels above and below the screen. Like previous Notes, it has a very squared-off aesthetic that makes it seem much taller than it is, while the camera bump in the left corner is quite a bit large and way more bulbous than the other smartphone­s here.

The best colour is the new matte Mystic Bronze that’s a cross between gold and rose gold. But you’ll probably want to put it in a case. For one it’s made entirely of glass, and for another, its size makes it tricky to hold even with two hands. The squared corners, flat bottom, and camera bump look good, but they combine to create a very awkward and clumsy grip. It’s also extremely heavy compared to the other phones here.

Weight

Note20 Ultra: 208g

OnePlus 8 Pro: 199g

iPhone 12: 164g

Pixel 5: 151g

The Pixel 5 isn’t just the lightest in this group, it’s also one of the nicest. Google did a great job with its latest Pixel phone, delivering the first design that doesn’t have enormous bezels. In fact, it’s the only Android phone that I’m aware of that has universal bezels all around, giving the Pixel

5 a balanced, symmetrica­l aesthetic similar to the iPhone 12.

Otherwise, it’s very much a Pixel. The silhouette is the same as it’s been since the original model, and the square camera array is very much cribbed from the Pixel 4. With very little bezel, the selfie cam

is in the left-hand corner of the screen and mostly tucked out of sight.

The Pixel 5 is the only phone here that isn’t made of glass, but it’s not quite aluminium either. The back is covered in a plastic bio-resin that gives the phone a strange texture and a lessthan-premium feel. The Sorta Sage colour is nice though and the chrome-wrapped power bottom is a nice touch.

The OnePlus 8 Pro is probably the least recognizab­le of the group, but that’s not to say it’s a plain or boring phone. It has a fantastic curved display and is the only phone in this bunch that doesn’t have a distractin­gly large camera array. The corners of the display perfectly match the phone’s shape, and the bezels above and below the screen are extremely skinny, giving it a near edge-to-edge aesthetic that feels great to hold.

The back is made of glass but it’s frosted so it doesn’t pick up fingerprin­ts as easily as the Note20 and iPhone 12. The two new colours, Glacial Green (8GB RAM) and Ultramarin­e Blue (12GB RAM), wrap

around the sides of the display and look fantastic.

At first glance, the iPhone 12 looks a lot like the iPhone 11 it replaces, but the subtle changes Apple has made are meaningful. The most obvious is the bezel size. On the iPhone 11, bezels were quite large at 5.57mm all around, but on the iPhone 12, they’re just 3.47mm. The iPhone 12 is also thinner and lighter than the iPhone 11, and since Apple has returned to a ‘flat’ design for the sides and the screen, the phone has an aesthetic that looks and feels even smaller than it is.

It’s also a lot lighter than the other all-glass phones here. Granted, it has a smaller screen than the Note20 and OnePlus 8 Pro, but the difference in both weight and distributi­on is palpable when you’re holding it. By contrast, the Note20 is very top-heavy and while the Pixel 5 is significan­tly lighter, feeling less like a premium phone and more like a plastic budget one. The iPhone 12 strikes a nice balance between balance and build quality.

The rather large notch remains as does the attention-grabbing camera array, but the iPhone 12’s overall design is the nicest Apple has produced in years. It’s solid, symmetrica­l, and stylish, and easily stands out in a crowded field of rounded rectangles. As phones become homogenous with giant screens and cameras, Apple continues to find a way to lead the way with smart iterations and character.

Our pick: iPhone 12

DISPLAY

Premium smartphone displays have reached the point where they basically all get A+ ratings from DisplayMat­e, so no matter which phone you get, you’re getting one of the best displays ever made.

Before we get into size, brightness, and pixel density, the main difference between the Android phones and the iPhone 12 is display speed. While the iPhone 12 is stuck at 60Hz, the Pixel 5 operates at 90Hz, and the Note20 Ultra and 8 Pro have 120Hz refresh rates. Higher refresh rates mean scrolling should be faster and gaming and videos smoother on those phones, especially when you switch between 60Hz and 120Hz on the Note20 Ultra and OnePlus 8T. But Apple does such a tremendous job with its display calibratio­n and OS optimizati­on that the iPhone 12 doesn’t feel noticeably slower than the 120Hz phones.

The same goes for the resolution. The iPhone 12 and the Pixel 5 both have Full HD+ 1080p displays while the Note20 Ultra and OnePlus 8 Pro have Quad HD+ 1440p displays. (One caveat, however: you need to lower the Note20 Ultra’s resolution to 1080p to use the 120Hz refresh rate.) The difference is negligible. While the Pixel 5 has separate issues with colour saturation and brightness, both

displays are as crisp and pixel-dense as the QHD displays, and the iPhone 12 is every bit as rich and vibrant. If I didn’t see the spec sheet, I’d never know the iPhone 12 has fewer pixels.

Apple might not have changed the resolution for its ‘Super Retina XDR display’, but it did add a small change that elevates it even further above the other phones here. Apple calls it Ceramic Shield and it’s designed to keep your phone’s screen from cracking when dropped from a high distance. I thankfully didn’t have a chance to test that, but after a month of use without a screen protector, I couldn’t see any micro scratches on my phone’s screen like on other phones, including the most recent iPhones.

While all of the phones here fall into the ‘large’ category, there’s nearly an inch between the smallest and the largest. That might not seem like much on paper, but it makes a huge difference when using them.

Screen size

Pixel 5: 6in

iPhone 12: 6.1in

OnePlus 8 Pro: 6.78in

Note20 Ultra: 6.9in

The Galaxy Note20 Ultra isn’t just the biggest among the phones here, it’s one of the nicest displays I’ve ever used. Colours are vibrant without being too saturated, photos are rich and bright (with a peak that touched 1,600 nits), and videos are dynamic and smooth. It’s hard to find a complaint, except perhaps it’s a bit too big.

The said, the OnePlus 8 Pro isn’t all that smaller than the Note20 and it, too, is visually stunning. Like

the Note20, the sides are curved, and its Quad HD+ 31,68x14,40 is bright and vivid. It’s bright and crisp, but I found the white balance to be a bit off at times and I noticed a slight purple tint when compared to the other displays.

And as I said above, the iPhone 12’s display is remarkable as well. But for speed, clarity, brightness, and depth, the Galaxy Note20

Ultra stands alone. Even with 1080p resolution, Apple is very close to the Note20 Ultra, and if the iPhone 13 gains a 120Hz ProMotion display as rumoured, it will more than likely catch up.

Our pick: Galaxy Note20 Ultra

PERFORMANC­E

The phones in this annual contest always represent the top of the line when it comes to processors and specs, and as such you’ll find the Snapdragon 865+ in the Note 29 Ultra, the 865 in the OnePlus 8 Pro, and the A14 Bionic in the iPhone 12.

But you’ll find a considerab­ly slower chip on the Pixel 5. To keep costs down, Google has opted for the slower 765G processor, which is plenty capable but in an entirely different league. It’s not a bad chip, but it’s more akin to the Snapdragon 835 in the Pixel 2 than any of Qualcomm’s newer phone chips.

So benchmarks are going to be a little skewed. They don’t tell the whole story, as Google’s Android optimizati­ons help a lot, but the message is pretty clear: If you want the fastest phone in 2020, the Pixel 5 isn’t it. It’s the iPhone 12.

Geekbench 5 CPU Single-core/Multi-core

iPhone 12: 1,599/4,107 Note20 Ultra: 973/3,252

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? The iPhone 12, far left, has a gorgeous design.
The iPhone 12, far left, has a gorgeous design.
 ??  ?? The Note20 Ultra looks pretty in Mystic Bronze.
The Note20 Ultra looks pretty in Mystic Bronze.
 ??  ?? The Google Pixel 5 has another offbeat colour: Sorta Sage.
The Google Pixel 5 has another offbeat colour: Sorta Sage.
 ??  ?? The OnePlus 8 Pro Ultramarin­e Blue colour is a beauty in its own right.
The OnePlus 8 Pro Ultramarin­e Blue colour is a beauty in its own right.
 ??  ?? You don’t even need to snap a picture to see that the Note20 Ultra’s camera array is more powerful than the iPhone 12’s.
You don’t even need to snap a picture to see that the Note20 Ultra’s camera array is more powerful than the iPhone 12’s.
 ??  ?? The phones here have different sized screens but all of them are stunning.
The phones here have different sized screens but all of them are stunning.
 ??  ?? The Galaxy Note20 Ultra (left) has a stunning 120Hz display.
The Galaxy Note20 Ultra (left) has a stunning 120Hz display.
 ??  ?? The iPhone 12 (left) and OnePlus 8 Pro both look beautiful in blue.
The iPhone 12 (left) and OnePlus 8 Pro both look beautiful in blue.

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