Android Advisor

Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra

Price: £1,199 from fave.co/2QGiCWY

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Ifeel like I need to give Samsung’s Galaxy S20 Ultra two scores. If I’m reviewing it solely on the merits of its components and what it can do, it’s easily a fivestar device, with only the smallest of perceptibl­e flaws.

The 6.9in display is remarkably bright and incredibly smooth when the 120Hz refresh rate is switched on, and the 40Mp hole-punch selfie camera is much more discreet than it was on the S10. The RAM, storage and processor are all the fastest you can get in a smartphone, and the 5,000mAh battery both lasts

all day and fills up incredibly quickly. And yes, the 100x Space Zoom camera is cooler than any other telephoto lens I’ve used.

But if I were to score the Galaxy S20 Ultra on usability and cost, I’d give it closer to 2 stars (hence the 3.5-star final score). Even if our review model didn’t start at £1,199, a price high enough to make Apple blush, the Galaxy S20 Ultra would still be far too much phone for most people. Everything feels extreme, especially its size. Samsung’s push to make the ultimate device has created a gorgeous and aweinspiri­ng superphone that is far beyond what most people need. Or even want.

Big, heavy, and awkward

For several generation­s now, Samsung has establishe­d that its ‘plus’ phones are essentiall­y larger versions of

base models with better cameras. On paper, that’s true of the S20 Ultra as well, but in reality, it’s much more than a super-sized Galaxy S20+.

I don’t usually spend much time thinking about the weight of my phone, but it’s hard to ignore the S20 Ultra’s mass. At 222 grams, it’s significan­tly heavier than S20+ (188g) and the S10 5G (198g). It’s actually a bit lighter than the iPhone 11 Pro Max, which clocks in at 226 grams, but you wouldn’t know it from holding it. With such a massive camera bump in the top left corner, the S20 Ultra is both top-heavy and sideheavy, so it requires a slightly different grip, lest it slide and slip out of your hands.

You can forget about one-handed operation. While the new, higher placement of the in-display fingerprin­t sensor has drasticall­y improved the accuracy and reliabilit­y of the scanner when picking

it up and unlocking with my thumb, the size of the S20 Ultra makes it difficult to do much else without using all 10 of my fingers. It was hard enough to use the 6.8in display on the Note 10+, but the S20 Ultra’s 6.9in screen, coupled with the weight and near-9mm thickness, is simply too much for one hand to bear.

The S20 Ultra is the only phone I’ve used that I could actually feel sliding down my hand as I held it. It’s a weird phenomenon, caused by a combinatio­n of the size, weight, and polished aluminium edges. Eventually, I settled on a grip that either contorted my pinkie finger under the bottom or used my off-hand thumb to keep it steady. I still had to adjust my grip every so often. Long stretches with the Ultra were downright uncomforta­ble.

Even if you have fingers long enough to comfortabl­y reach the upper corners of the screen, the bulbous camera will complicate your grip. While giant geometrica­l camera arrays are all the rage, the S20 Ultra takes it to almost comical proportion­s, with a bump that protrudes some 3mm from the back. Because it’s such a broad bump, taking up about an eighth of the rear case, your fingers will inevitably butt into it.

The giant camera bump also makes it tricky to use on a table, especially when tapping the upper left side of the screen. It’s wobblier than the S10 and the Pixel, and when a notificati­on comes in, the haptic vibration is downright startling. All said, it’s the first phone I wanted to put in a case, which is a shame, because the glass repels fingerprin­ts surprising­ly well.

Elsewhere, it’s easier to raise the volume, as the rocker has been moved to the right side above the power button. That leaves the left side completely smooth, because Samsung has dumped the Bixby button once and for all.

Gone, too, is the headphone jack, which we expected after the Note 10+ dropped the port last year. Samsung is offering a pair of USB-C earbuds in the box and selling a set of Bluetooth Galaxy Buds+ earbuds for £139. It’s still a bummer that Samsung couldn’t find 3.5mm of free space on a phone this big.

Pixel perfection

Samsung has delivered its most impressive display yet for the S20 product line – and that’s before you even touch it. The weirdly off-centre camera cut-out of the

S10 product line has been reposition­ed in the S20 so it’s smack-dab in the centre of the top of the screen. While the hole is still a little too low to centre itself inside the status bar, its new position still improves the look of the phone.

I can’t really find a fault with the image quality. It’s impressive­ly crisp at 1440p and still very nice at the default 1080p resolution. I was able to crank it all the way up to 650 nits’ brightness manually, and it reached an eye-piercing 1,350 nits with auto-brightness enabled. Its ability to transition automatica­lly between low and bright light is excellent. Colours are vivid without being too saturated, whites are natural, blacks are impressive­ly deep, and the whole palette is rich

and robust. There just aren’t enough superlativ­es for how incredible the S20’s display is.

It’s also not as curved as previous Infinity displays. It’s hard to see without putting it next to a Note 10 or S10, but the S20 screen is decidedly ‘flatter’ than those of previous generation­s (though definitely more curved than the S10e’s). That’s a good thing: it helps cut down on accidental palm touches and still does well to hide the side bezels. I vastly prefer it to the extreme ‘waterfall’ displays that Oppo and Vivo are pushing.

Samsung has once again gone with an ultrasonic in-display fingerprin­t sensor on the S20 family. While a thousand-pound-plus phone should really have

3D facial recognitio­n, this implementa­tion of the fingerprin­t sensor is much improved over what we had with the S10. The position of the scanner is higher on the screen and the target is a bit bigger, so I didn’t need to alter my grip or flex my thumb to hit it. It’s still not as consistent­ly fast as the hardware sensor on the S9 and probably never will be, but it’s plenty accurate and reliable now.

The best feature on the S20 display is actually switched off by default (and I’m not talking about the usual WQHD 1440p resolution). The S20 is Samsung’s first product line to feature a high-refresh display, and it’s gone for the gusto, opting for a full 120Hz, twice as fast as the standard 60Hz. It’s glorious. Compared to the standard 60Hz setting, scrolling, animation

and gaming are fantastica­lly smooth, well worth the serious hit to battery life when it’s switched on.

When pitted against the Pixel 4’s 90Hz Smooth Display, however, the difference is not nearly as obvious. Samsung could easily have gotten away with 90Hz, saved some battery life and offered it for 1440p resolution as well, but as it stands the 120Hz setting is available only with Full HD 1080p resolution. Fast refresh with WQHD would have been nice, especially on a screen this size – I’m holding out hope that Samsung will unlock it with a future update. Despite that limitation, however, the 120Hz screen is one of the best reasons to buy any S20 phone.

Speed to spare

Galaxy phones have been fast enough since the Snapdragon 820 processor in the Galaxy S7, but the Snapdragon 865 in the S20 line is on another level. Snapdragon 855 Plus-powered phones had already broken the 10,000 threshold on the PCMark Work 2.0 benchmark, the S20 crushes expectatio­ns with a score of 12,350. While the speed boost is palpable, Qualcomm doesn’t deserve all of the credit. Samsung is using entirely new RAM modules inside the S20, and every handset is packed with at least 12GB of LPDDR5 memory. Plus you’re able to keep three apps open for faster switching, so launching games with lengthy startup times are lightning-quick. To give you an idea of how it feels to have this much RAM: I stopped counting the apps on my Recents screen at 50.

Even the SSD has improved. It’s not just the 128GB capacity – once again, twice as much as the Pixel and

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? You won’t find the S20 Ultra name anywhere on the phone, but everyone will know what it is
You won’t find the S20 Ultra name anywhere on the phone, but everyone will know what it is
 ??  ?? The S20 Ultra’s USB-C port is finally perfectly centred on the bottom edge
The S20 Ultra’s USB-C port is finally perfectly centred on the bottom edge
 ??  ?? The S20 Ultra towers over the Galaxy S10+, which isn’t exactly small
The S20 Ultra towers over the Galaxy S10+, which isn’t exactly small
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? That’s no moon, that’s the 100x Space Zoom camera bump
That’s no moon, that’s the 100x Space Zoom camera bump
 ??  ?? You can fit an awful lot of app icons on the Galaxy S20 Ultra’s screen
You can fit an awful lot of app icons on the Galaxy S20 Ultra’s screen

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