I would suggest bringing up the point that the lower resolutions (often set by default) on AMOLED devices are often there to benefit the longevity of the display, because of the pentile arrangement of LEDs and the green/blue subpixels, not necessarily the battery life. A test regarding burn-in at these resolutions might be a good idea?
believe me there are lots of people that wish that was true because for some reason they want to believe lower resolution will improve battery life and if you think they will set their resolution to max after watching this video then you are wrong they will keep doing it and swear it helped them improve battery life by at least 20 percent
@イレ the higher the resolution, the more work is for gpu. But when you "simulate" lower resolution on higher resolution display, CPU is working more to simulate lower resolution, so it evens out.
Thank you for finally proving the point there's no point in lowering the resolution. You can't physically limit the amount of pixels being pushed, you only lower the resolution.
The same pixels are still being lit no matter the resolution so makes sense for general usage. However if you game allot I suppose you could see a benefit to lower resolutions as the GPU is not being hit so hard
This is where the only noticeable difference will be, idk why people say lower resolution will save battery when the phone isn't rendering anything graphically intensive.
I think only PC guys know and understand this fact. I'd been arguing with my friends for years about how changing the resolution on phones won't do shit to battery life, and the upscaling will replicate the information and spread it through all the pixels. As the wise gentlemen in this comment thread said, it only helps when there's a gpu-bound task going on. Its good to see people being rational.
Pepe I don’t know anyone that don’t play a game on they phone . What growing up got to do with anything? Grown ups don’t get to play games? If you getting a phone just for browsing and talking then it’s pointless for u to spend of 150 for a phone. Pointless for u to buy a s10. Your comment makes no sense
Let me explain the reason behind the same results: When you lower your resulotion, you don't turn off pixels, you just lower your cpu and gpu usage because your hardware doesn't have to render all those extra pixels and the same amount of pixels are on even when you lower your resulotion so the difference isn't significant when power save is only from cpu and gpu:) If there are two smart phones with the same hardware and battery but only difference is native screen resulotion then you can see some differences between two phones.
A native 1080p screen would probably making a difference though, since it has less pixels to light up/change. The 1440p display will still display 1440p pixels in a 1080p mode.
@@dedanieldd Yes, that's what I'm saying. A 2560x1440 display is still displaying 2560x1440 pixels despite the resolution fed to it is only 1920x1080 for example. Hence why a 1080p screen would use less power because less physical pixels, and a 1440p display running 1080p would not.
Wayyyy, no, it's not. The problem is phone even on lower resolution settings just doesn't need to generate image in high resolution, but it still need to highlight these pixels, so theoretically it's possible that phones with displays with lower resolutions can be able to last longer on the battery. There is also another thing - I'm not sure, but shouldn't heat dissipation be important here? Phone with higher resolution may get way hotter when u hold it in the hand all the time, causing some battery problems. When it lays on the table and thats pretty new phones the diffrence won't be visible.
Make sense. At 1080p your phone renders the image but then it needs to calculate the color of each pixel so the time it 'saves' by calculating a smaller image it wastes in pixel color calculation.
The reason why it’s the same story between the tests is because, no matter what resolution you change it to, the hardware physical screen is still 1440p with all pixels turned on. 1080p makes 1/2 the amount of pixels (or whatever the scaling is) set to be the same between the pixels next to them, making that microscopic view (and overall view of the phone) less sharp. It makes little to no difference because all the pixels are still being powered.
would have been interesting to also include 720p just as an option for really low battery life in emergency situations or when on a long time away from the charger.
that is because all the pixels are still on, as 1080 means more pixels are showing the same colour while 1440 means all pixels showing individual things. the only way 1080 might save battery is that that amount of pixels from 1440p down to 1080 would be switched off, which would then save battery (unless ur stuck on an lcd display like the iphone)
Most reviewers today just rush things to upload, read the marketing papers and don't even do real tests as long as they got views. Thanks for taking your time and giving an end this resolution debate.
Yes, THANK YOU for doing this test! SO many phone reviews suggest there's supposed to be some kind of appreciable battery life difference the two resolutions without actually TESTING the difference. And the results are just as I suspected
i've been using galaxy S10+ for more than four months on the 1080p resolution NOW i'm switching to the 1440p since it has no effect on the battery Thank YOU sooo much
Me before the video: there will be a big difference Me after the video: immediately changing the resolution on my phone to 1440p Oh wait my A70 is already at max resolution which is 1080p 😢
@@kamelalg9859 but tbf that 720p display is one of the best. Saw a comparison where 2 phones, (1 iphone xr and 1 pocophone 1080p) were covered up. Most people didn't recognise the phones but chose the iphone. Depends on the build wuality
I think since the display is set natively to 1440p it still uses that resolution. It just doesn't show it. In the background it still has to display the same amount of pixels. So the resolution would only make a difference with a different display.
Holy shit you still make videos. I havent seen one of your videos since like 2014 or 2015. You were doing drop tests with that wicked robot machine thing.
the gpu on a phone is always factory limited to work in a certain speed to avoid overheating so when you cranks it up to 1440p in a game the gpu is still working on that speed delivering less fps then in 1080p, but if you want a conclusive result you need to run a more demanding title like asphalt
If you were to use the battery saver on your phone, it tells you how much battery you save by changing your resolution and it's a minimum difference. Like 5 minutes or something like that.
There's a difference for people who use their phone to play heavy games like mmorpgs or shooter games. The 1440p does drain battery faster from experience. I could play games like Mobile Legends or Arena of Valor on 1440p and it wouldn't drain the battery as fast as when i would play a MMORPG like Perfect World Mobile on either resolutions.
Thank you so much for doing this test, i guess it shows that the bettery still needs the same power to light up a same-size-screen, whether that screen is divided into a million pixels or just 500 000 pixels. Please compare the 60hz vs 120hz when the S20 arrives, hopefully the same logic should remain
You have to remember that when you have two videos playing at their MAXIMUM RESOLUTION (typically 4k) you are having the Processor PUSH those pixels regardless of whether or not the display can show them. Meaning you force performance to BE the same. Rather than a more accurate test of limiting the video to each displays setting. (1440p vs 1080p) because realistically, that would be where the change is shown.
@@GregJ22 same here on myMcLaren Edition 7t pro. I also dont see much difference in battery after forcing 90hz on all apps though adb. I easily gets 8-9 hours on screen time.
Why don't you look at AnTuTu and other benchmark scores? Since it's basically fhe same phone, I don't think it will make much difference.. I think this channel isn't just realizing request without thinking, especially when it's just a miniscule population who is asking..
*Running the phone at lower resolution makes the phone more snappy and responsive. my s7 edge is most snappy in 720p Vs 1440p. Everything happens instantly. I have all animations off aswell.*
@@RipCityBassWorks You're claiming that because it's nearing 2020, a display with less pixels is suddenly irrelevant even though the iPhone XR's screen is still good. I have the 7 and I don't complain about the resolution, it looks sharp even that low of a resolution because it becomes retina at normal viewing distances. You can even have trouble spotting pixels on something as old as a 4s, its the size of the display which makes the pixels small enough so you don't notice.
That moment when you realize that changing the resolution only make a barely insignificant (if not inexistent) hit on the battery draining. Even though the sponsor of this video was very interesting this time.
Some people just don't understand on a 2k display even if you lower it to 1080p it will still light up all the pixels, which is same as 2K and that means you re not gonna save any battery. The only thing is that the image and text become blurry and gpu doesn't have to render too much details, that's actually how you save your battery from lowering the resolution, but again it's nothing compares to screen's battery consumption. And same thing goes to resolution, 1080p setting on a 2K screen is way better than 1080p setting on a 1080p screen, especially for OLED screen which usually uses PenTile matrix. So don't say something like "I can't tell difference between 2k and 1080p on my phone so I will switch to 1080p phone next time". You will regret that LOL
Lmao and I see comments when like the note 10 loses the battery test "OH U SET IT TO THE HIGHEST RES, U SHOULD'VE SET IT TO 1080P SINCE MOST PEOPLE USE 1080P" welp u wrong btw thanks for this comparison man
It is actually correct. Because on two S10, the number of physical pixels are same, no matter the settings. But on some phone that can only do 1080p, they do have less physical pixels and that matters.
@Eragor the Kindhearted Right. And it delivers; almost as well as phones with lesser screens, and definitely better than some phones which cost almost as much.
@@ryandinto1769, he's right about resolution, didn't you try a 1080p notebook and a 4k notebook? The 4k drains much more battery because it has more PHYSICAL pixels. What didn't you understand here?? And also no Samsung's software don't "suck" it's just that these pixels are still lighted up and the difference can't be seen because changing software resolution will affect only the numbers of pixels that will be rendered by the gpu thus making the phone faster in apps like games that use the gpu a lot more.
I think it depends on the processor, I have an Exynos S10+ and when I change the resolution from WQHD+ to FHD+ I get an average of 2-4 hours of more battery life.
Learn more about biometric authentication: kas.pr/6rtj
PhoneBuff You should do a version of this with a phone on 120Hz refresh rate vs 60Hz. See if there's a big difference.
I would suggest bringing up the point that the lower resolutions (often set by default) on AMOLED devices are often there to benefit the longevity of the display, because of the pentile arrangement of LEDs and the green/blue subpixels, not necessarily the battery life. A test regarding burn-in at these resolutions might be a good idea?
Would love to see a comparison of 1440 vs 720. Surely that would show a difference in battery life!!!??
Just wanna say - great video, unbiased, great pace.
Man where is the ROG phone 2 ?
Ok, now do a 90 Hz Vs 60 Hz ;)
👍👍
👍👍
Do it
👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻
You read my mind
Plot Twist: He forgot to change the resolution to 1440p
Lmaaooooo
believe me there are lots of people that wish that was true because for some reason they want to believe lower resolution will improve battery life and if you think they will set their resolution to max after watching this video then you are wrong they will keep doing it and swear it helped them improve battery life by at least 20 percent
@@pepela2219 lol
Lmao
Y'all funny
Immediately changed to 1440p on my S10 after watching this video. Thanks bud, appreciate your job👍
Me too ...🙌
Me too 😂😂😂👏
Me too
Yeah but when you put power saving mode on a S10 it limits the screen resolution to 1080p so there must be an affect on battery life
@@a-f3013 depends on which power mode you use though
Phonebuff: some people cant even differentiate between 1080p and 1440p displays.
Me watching it on a 720p display: *absolutely*
Am at 144p
I am in nokia 220
syed ibad My iPhone 7’s resolution is 1334 x 750. So I have a higher resolution than you.
Cloudy Silver I didn’t realize that was possible. Do you have DSL or Dialup?
@@BaconFaceMcGee but no headphone brah
I've been living in a lie. 1440p here I come.
😂😂😂😂😂😂
Shame here bro switching now
Same here with the note 10+. Here I come 1440p... 😂😂😂
@@josesampaio5345 how's the battery been since switching?
Battery results since switching? Worse? The same?
Next :
1080p vs 720p
1440p vs 720p
There won't be a diffrence. Maybe slight in 1440p vs 720p
@イレ I dont think so
@イレ the higher the resolution, the more work is for gpu. But when you "simulate" lower resolution on higher resolution display, CPU is working more to simulate lower resolution, so it evens out.
Thank you for finally proving the point there's no point in lowering the resolution. You can't physically limit the amount of pixels being pushed, you only lower the resolution.
I don't think anyone thought it would improve battery life. Instead people do it so it feels faster.
You said nothing with this comment buddy
It does make gaming faster tho
But will it affect performance ???
Which means toxic Samsung fans will bark this in every battery test comparison videos : the screen of samsung is 1440p , so it's the winner 😂 .
The same pixels are still being lit no matter the resolution so makes sense for general usage. However if you game allot I suppose you could see a benefit to lower resolutions as the GPU is not being hit so hard
This is where the only noticeable difference will be, idk why people say lower resolution will save battery when the phone isn't rendering anything graphically intensive.
Yeah lol
@@lodbldbol because people are idiots
I think only PC guys know and understand this fact.
I'd been arguing with my friends for years about how changing the resolution on phones won't do shit to battery life, and the upscaling will replicate the information and spread it through all the pixels.
As the wise gentlemen in this comment thread said, it only helps when there's a gpu-bound task going on.
Its good to see people being rational.
Pepe I don’t know anyone that don’t play a game on they phone . What growing up got to do with anything? Grown ups don’t get to play games? If you getting a phone just for browsing and talking then it’s pointless for u to spend of 150 for a phone. Pointless for u to buy a s10. Your comment makes no sense
Who else just switched their phone to QHD after watching this 😂😂
@BatManSandWitch iPhone XR or 11 user I see, do you miss the 1080p option ?
@BatManSandWitch oh I see :(
I'm using s10e, can't change resolution #😢
My actual phone only has 720p screen tho
You guys have the snapdragon samsung my note 9 have exynos 😕
Me: There is no difference, I’ll set the display of my phone to 1440p.
Also me: *Cries in a iPhone 11*
HazardTV 😂😂
720p like samsung a10 hah
@@PacMacDo Quality wise... not even comparable lmao
Bro, the display is good man. Can't see pixels.
Bruh 👀😂
Quick answer: No difference
Long answer: No difference at all
Junfong Lee 😂
Ty
Not true! I have the note 10 + and my kids have the iPhone 11 and you can clearly see the difference between the resolution when viewing 4k
@@frednugent8068 The battery they mean
WE NEED 1440p vs 720p
If 1080 vs 1440p made no differce 720p wont do anything as well
I try 720p on my note9 and the battery last longer compared to 1440p.
But i prefer 1440p
@@KINDLY7 yes my note 9 definitely gets a lot better battery on 720p
No we don't
We do
God this deserves a million LIKES. Myth BUSTED
I can finally put my S10 at 1440p with confidence, thanks! ✌️
You channel does these tests on a higher standard than anyone else, keep it up man, you are killing it!
This video should have uploaded in dec 31,2017.
Krishna Dj why?
Let me explain the reason behind the same results: When you lower your resulotion, you don't turn off pixels, you just lower your cpu and gpu usage because your hardware doesn't have to render all those extra pixels and the same amount of pixels are on even when you lower your resulotion so the difference isn't significant when power save is only from cpu and gpu:) If there are two smart phones with the same hardware and battery but only difference is native screen resulotion then you can see some differences between two phones.
Cpu does not render frames but ok. Resolution has no effect on cpu
Before video: keeping it at 1440p no matter what
After: I was a genius lol
Same bro
💯%
A native 1080p screen would probably making a difference though, since it has less pixels to light up/change. The 1440p display will still display 1440p pixels in a 1080p mode.
That's not how it works. Lower resolution will be scalled to display all over the pixels.
@@dedanieldd Yes, that's what I'm saying. A 2560x1440 display is still displaying 2560x1440 pixels despite the resolution fed to it is only 1920x1080 for example. Hence why a 1080p screen would use less power because less physical pixels, and a 1440p display running 1080p would not.
@@BeckOfficial ouhhh sorry for the misunderstanding
"1080p uses less GPU "
*Texting and calling in the phone to see difference*
ikr
They were trying to get a sense of real life use. I'm glad they include that, thorough experiment.
They should've do some 3d gaming to make use of those extra pixels.
They should've do some 3d gaming to make use of those extra pixels.
I set my galaxy s9 screen resolution to QHD immediately as i watched the result
Same! But hoping the effects won't be more noticeable on my S9 since the battery has degraded
Plot twist...this test only applicable to dynamic amoled display only
@@CelestialArchangel what about lcd
@@kasadam85 You can't change that on LCDs. At least I've never seen one
Me too. I used to have my phones display (Galaxy S10) to 720p. Now I'm going to set it to 1440p
Finally a test nobody does but one which actually helps, appreciate it mate 🤙
Next : minimum power mode vs normal
Now the “Higher resolution” argument is invalid
so nothing can be an excuse for the absolutely shitty battery life of note 10 and pixel 4
This test is not much accurate since he does not use much extensive gpu app like pubg or cod
All of the pixels are active, you are still seeing at 2k. Just 1080p res graphics, so the gpu 4 times less pixels to calculate
@@ayaUwU finally someone with a brain
Wayyyy, no, it's not. The problem is phone even on lower resolution settings just doesn't need to generate image in high resolution, but it still need to highlight these pixels, so theoretically it's possible that phones with displays with lower resolutions can be able to last longer on the battery.
There is also another thing - I'm not sure, but shouldn't heat dissipation be important here? Phone with higher resolution may get way hotter when u hold it in the hand all the time, causing some battery problems. When it lays on the table and thats pretty new phones the diffrence won't be visible.
That's why Samsung has the option to use battery saver with 1440p
You can only see difference in an actual panel, higher resolution panel's settings are just simulating the lower resolution 😉
And here is me trying to find difference between resolutions while watching at 240p
Ur most funny here lol
Don't worry, I can't tell at 1080p on desktop
@Cloudy Silver Normal 24"
@@jatoxo my phone hardly get 360P it lags at 360p i brought my device for 49 dollars
Giorgi Maraneli 4K best 😱😎
One question: this s10 equipped with exynos or snapdragon? You have exynos results?
Make sense. At 1080p your phone renders the image but then it needs to calculate the color of each pixel so the time it 'saves' by calculating a smaller image it wastes in pixel color calculation.
It makes sense.. It does not matter what resolution, if all of them are lit up, they use the same amount of energy.
The reason why it’s the same story between the tests is because, no matter what resolution you change it to, the hardware physical screen is still 1440p with all pixels turned on. 1080p makes 1/2 the amount of pixels (or whatever the scaling is) set to be the same between the pixels next to them, making that microscopic view (and overall view of the phone) less sharp. It makes little to no difference because all the pixels are still being powered.
Doesn't it take more power to render the apps in a higher resolution
would have been interesting to also include 720p just as an option for really low battery life in emergency situations or when on a long time away from the charger.
that is because all the pixels are still on, as 1080 means more pixels are showing the same colour while 1440 means all pixels showing individual things. the only way 1080 might save battery is that that amount of pixels from 1440p down to 1080 would be switched off, which would then save battery (unless ur stuck on an lcd display like the iphone)
Most reviewers today just rush things to upload, read the marketing papers and don't even do real tests as long as they got views. Thanks for taking your time and giving an end this resolution debate.
Someone just give this guy an award.
I've been waiting for this video forever!!! Thanks!
Yes, THANK YOU for doing this test! SO many phone reviews suggest there's supposed to be some kind of appreciable battery life difference the two resolutions without actually TESTING the difference. And the results are just as I suspected
Thank you for this video. It's exactly what I was looking for.
I Immediately changed to from 1080p to 1440p on my S23Ultra after watching this video. Thanks, bud, appreciate your job!!!
Did you notice a difference in battery life after you switched? I would love to see a test specifically on S23U, but I can't seem to find one.
@@PhazonBlaxor my battery life is definitely better with 1080p. Since i have owned mybs23 almost a year i keep switching between them both
@@ShimaS-0079 Really? I've switched to 1440p and did not noticed a difference. Maybe I should try 1080p again for a week or two and see how it is.
You're the man! Meaningful videos all the time.
Shit, I thought there's a real difference. Now setting 1440
On my s23 ultra i see a tremendous difference in battery's life between WQHD vs HD or FHD however i also do see a difference in image quality
i've been using galaxy S10+ for more than four months on the 1080p resolution NOW i'm switching to the 1440p since it has no effect on the battery Thank YOU sooo much
I love your testing methods with the automated phone navigation. Really informative 👍
Me before the video: there will be a big difference
Me after the video: immediately changing the resolution on my phone to 1440p
Oh wait my A70 is already at max resolution which is 1080p 😢
kamel alg A70 still beats the flagship models in battery life and screen size, it’s a really good phone, probably the best midrange out there.
@@99Venom a51
I have a70 too and its good
@Suppanut Saengratwatchara it makes sense cause A70 is half the price of an iPhone11 with a 720p lcd screen 😒
@@kamelalg9859 but tbf that 720p display is one of the best. Saw a comparison where 2 phones, (1 iphone xr and 1 pocophone 1080p) were covered up. Most people didn't recognise the phones but chose the iphone. Depends on the build wuality
I think since the display is set natively to 1440p it still uses that resolution. It just doesn't show it. In the background it still has to display the same amount of pixels. So the resolution would only make a difference with a different display.
Iphone : Low power mode vs Normal
Like to pop up!!
Generally a small difference
Low power dims the screen and turns off some sneaky animations that people don’t usually notice.
Baby Magnum which animations?
Dark mode already have a video same as low mode to me
Joey Keilholz no big one, look it up
Should have watched this years ago! Thanks for testing
Holy shit you still make videos. I havent seen one of your videos since like 2014 or 2015. You were doing drop tests with that wicked robot machine thing.
the gpu on a phone is always factory limited to work in a certain speed to avoid overheating so when you cranks it up to 1440p in a game the gpu is still working on that speed delivering less fps then in 1080p, but if you want a conclusive result you need to run a more demanding title like asphalt
Asphalt is a 720p game on mobile.
If you were to use the battery saver on your phone, it tells you how much battery you save by changing your resolution and it's a minimum difference. Like 5 minutes or something like that.
Can you repeat this video in 2022? So we can see if the software now is able to show this difference in power consumption
I just switched from 720p to 1440p on my S21 Ultra and holy cow everything is so much readable and detailed
Nice demo. I wonder how much of a difference refresh rate makes.
Ok, I'll go with 1440p now.
Thank you.
There's a difference for people who use their phone to play heavy games like mmorpgs or shooter games. The 1440p does drain battery faster from experience. I could play games like Mobile Legends or Arena of Valor on 1440p and it wouldn't drain the battery as fast as when i would play a MMORPG like Perfect World Mobile on either resolutions.
Samsung caps the resolution of games to 1080p and sometimes 720 automatically
stefan243546 It’s not even Samsung that do that, but devs of the games.
@@ThibautMahringer well st least for clash royale it actuslly is samsung and even more, an app called game optimizing service
@@ThibautMahringer for asphalt 9 yes the game is capped at a low resolution because its graphics are very intensive yes
stefan243546 Oh maybe for the lighter games then, it doesn’t makes that much of a difference.
I am using Note 9 and i was waiting for this test after a long time . Thanks for the video. ♥️♥️.
I set it to 1440p from day one no major drain
Hi and I am using Note 9 😂😂
I want the note 9
@@magazinetrash1226 It is a really good phone but unfortunately it has only a good camera it should have a better
@@zakelinos yeah it should have a better camera
This is the only video on TH-cam regarding this topic thanks brother for providing us a better understanding about this misconception.
I've been waiting for this video for a long time. Thumbs up 👍🏼
Thank you so much for doing this test, i guess it shows that the bettery still needs the same power to light up a same-size-screen, whether that screen is divided into a million pixels or just 500 000 pixels. Please compare the 60hz vs 120hz when the S20 arrives, hopefully the same logic should remain
I'm now setting to 1440p after watching this.
About to Enjoy the pixels I paid for 💯👍🍻
You have to remember that when you have two videos playing at their MAXIMUM RESOLUTION (typically 4k) you are having the Processor PUSH those pixels regardless of whether or not the display can show them. Meaning you force performance to BE the same. Rather than a more accurate test of limiting the video to each displays setting. (1440p vs 1080p) because realistically, that would be where the change is shown.
Finally. Thanks for this video, I thought the results would be slightly different. Happy new year
Damn! Well in this case, I'll keep using 1440p on my S22 Ultra. Thank you for doing the test! :)
Who else immediately went and changed their resolution after watching this video 😂😂
I want to, but my phone's highest resolution is 480p😭😢
@@DarkGenesisSo2 which phone?
@@mrmoinn 5 year old Samsung Galaxy Core Prime (SM-G360H)
@@DarkGenesisSo2 never even heard of that wow
My s6 does not have an option to change reselution (1440p display)
Do it please with the OnePlus 7 pro with 60 & 90 Hz screen options!
I get no difference on my 7t pro with 90 and 60 hz.
@@GregJ22 same here on myMcLaren Edition 7t pro. I also dont see much difference in battery after forcing 90hz on all apps though adb. I easily gets 8-9 hours on screen time.
after watching this *grabs s8+ , sets it to 1440p* nOw I cAn SaY ThAt mY ScReEn Is BeTtEr ThAn tHe IpHoNe 11 PrO's
^.^
No iphone 11 pro has a high res display
@@umairali2554 no iphone 11 pro has Full HD+ display while S8+ has 2K display
@@markoa5 3k to be exact
@@srp770 yea
@@markoa5 im a huge apple fan but you’re alright
Apple has not the best screens
Been waiting for this one for a while
Was waiting for this!
When I buy my new phone I always change my resolution to HD+ 720p 😂
Note 10 battery duration:
Power saving mode vs normal?
For the third time: Would you do a Galaxy Note 10 Snapdragon version vs Exynos one battery and speed test, please?
Samsung: Grab my bribe and don't do such test!
Shouldn't have that much difference. Signal strength though...
He's already done a test with them I can't remember if it was battery or performance tho I don't think he did both just search his channel
@@amonrei exynos gets destroyed by Snapdragon he has videos from previous phones
Why don't you look at AnTuTu and other benchmark scores? Since it's basically fhe same phone, I don't think it will make much difference..
I think this channel isn't just realizing request without thinking, especially when it's just a miniscule population who is asking..
Ive been waiting for this video to be done
For years
Thank you for settling this once and for all
It should have an effect on FPS on graphic intensive games like CODM and PUBG
I don't think that mobile processors can render 1440p while playing graphics intensive games like CODM and PUBG
I have S9+ Exynos Processor:
and When I use the 1440p, I Get good battery performance
and When I use the 1080p, I Get bad battery performance
What!😂 but this is good i suposse
*Running the phone at lower resolution makes the phone more snappy and responsive. my s7 edge is most snappy in 720p Vs 1440p. Everything happens instantly. I have all animations off aswell.*
Evidence?
Hahahaah 👎👎🤣
Placebo effect
the famous placebo effect.
@@theresalwaysanotherway3996 you can try it yourself.
I've been waiting for this video for years
This is a big video. Massive thanks. Finally puts it to bed once and for all
Lol at the Apple fanboys defending the XR's display in the comments. It's nearly 2020, a 720p display is completely irrelevant.
And it still looks good, just accept that moderation is key instead of being an elitist.
@@MutaharFarooq agreed
@@MutaharFarooq
I'm not an elitist, I literally use a $100 phone (LG V30) with a quad HD display. I have a OnePlus 3T as my backup phone.
It’s 828p, if it was 720p at that size you’d be able to see pixels
@@RipCityBassWorks You're claiming that because it's nearing 2020, a display with less pixels is suddenly irrelevant even though the iPhone XR's screen is still good. I have the 7 and I don't complain about the resolution, it looks sharp even that low of a resolution because it becomes retina at normal viewing distances. You can even have trouble spotting pixels on something as old as a 4s, its the size of the display which makes the pixels small enough so you don't notice.
That moment when you realize that changing the resolution only make a barely insignificant (if not inexistent) hit on the battery draining.
Even though the sponsor of this video was very interesting this time.
yuck, i didnt like this idea
the biometric ring
Some people just don't understand on a 2k display even if you lower it to 1080p it will still light up all the pixels, which is same as 2K and that means you re not gonna save any battery. The only thing is that the image and text become blurry and gpu doesn't have to render too much details, that's actually how you save your battery from lowering the resolution, but again it's nothing compares to screen's battery consumption. And same thing goes to resolution, 1080p setting on a 2K screen is way better than 1080p setting on a 1080p screen, especially for OLED screen which usually uses PenTile matrix. So don't say something like "I can't tell difference between 2k and 1080p on my phone so I will switch to 1080p phone next time". You will regret that LOL
Wow!
Interesting Content as usual! 👍🏼
Keep up the good work 👍🏼🤘🏼
Lowering the resolution occurs to better performance as well, since cpu and gpu don't have to push the amount of pixels of a 1440p resolution
VERY NEXT episode!
Next month : oh here the VERY NEXT episode (so long :( )
So does this mean i can update my resolution on my phone
yes
Yes, you'll receive the new resolution via an upcoming software update.
@@SamerElChami XD
You have done everyone a great service. Very scientific and thorough test. 👍🏻
Ok, now do a 1080p vs 720p battery test
Watching on my S10 in 1440p :)
Lmao and I see comments when like the note 10 loses the battery test "OH U SET IT TO THE HIGHEST RES, U SHOULD'VE SET IT TO 1080P SINCE MOST PEOPLE USE 1080P" welp u wrong
btw thanks for this comparison man
It's actually impressive, how long the Note 10 goes, pushing all those pixels.
It is actually correct. Because on two S10, the number of physical pixels are same, no matter the settings. But on some phone that can only do 1080p, they do have less physical pixels and that matters.
@Eragor the Kindhearted Right. And it delivers; almost as well as phones with lesser screens, and definitely better than some phones which cost almost as much.
@@yifeiren8004
Explain plz 😪
How does physical pixels affect battery when off? or you want to admit that Samsung's software is clearly suck? 😶
@@ryandinto1769, he's right about resolution, didn't you try a 1080p notebook and a 4k notebook? The 4k drains much more battery because it has more PHYSICAL pixels. What didn't you understand here?? And also no Samsung's software don't "suck" it's just that these pixels are still lighted up and the difference can't be seen because changing software resolution will affect only the numbers of pixels that will be rendered by the gpu thus making the phone faster in apps like games that use the gpu a lot more.
I think it depends on the processor, I have an Exynos S10+ and when I change the resolution from WQHD+ to FHD+ I get an average of 2-4 hours of more battery life.
Me too... that's right 👍
*after seeing this video on my s10+ exynos : *bumps up res to 1440p
*After seeing this comment : *goes back to 1080p
@@voidedkn0x lmao dude what a turn of events 🤣
@@voidedkn0x I think you can go back to 1440 again because it depends on usage. If you play a lot, yeah, there will be a difference.
This channel is sooo underrated
So satisfying to know. Thanks for the vid 🙌🏼
This should have been done a long time ago
Then why didn’t you do it?
Cant agree more..a lot of debate about this..
Remember guys this is snapdragon version and plz do this for note 9😁
Hey I need that 1 percent for Instagram
As always .... excellent comparative
Why not use a 3rd S10 to compare with 720p ?