Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra benchmarks – Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy examined

This year it finally happened the new Galaxy S series runs a single SoC across the globe. No more Exynos versions, there’s only Snapdragon. But that doesn’t mean the new Galaxy S23 series doesn’t stand out from the crowd. The Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 running under the hood in all S23 phones is actually “Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy”.

That’s because the CPU and GPU are both overclocked and offer slightly higher performance than the other phones with the same chipset on the market. But how much of a difference does it make?

The SD 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy sports the same CPU configuration with 1x Cortex-X3, 2x Cortex-A715, 2x Cortex-A710 and 3x Cortex-A510 cores, but the main Cortex-X3 core is clocked at 3.36 GHz instead of 3.2GHz. The same goes for the GPU – the Adreno 740 here is running at 719 MHz instead of the usual 680 MHz.

But without further ado, let’s dive into the early benchmarks. Notably, we’ve selected only phones with 1440p displays, where possible, so we can have more comparable results in the onscreen graphics tests.

GeekBench 5 (multi-core)

Higher is better


  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    5423

  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    5211

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    4927

  • OnePlus 11

    4899

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    4300

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    3682

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    3657

GeekBench 5 (single-core)

Higher is better


  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    1890

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    1537

  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    1486

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    1324

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    1180

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    1169

  • OnePlus 11

    1150

The results from the Geekbench 5 CPU test may come as a surprise for some but there’s a perfectly good explanation why the Galaxy S23 Ultra takes the lead over the nubia Red Magic 8 Pro in the single-core test and falls behind the latter in the multi-core scenario. For one, the Cortex-X3 inside the S23 Ultra is clocked higher and secondly, the big Cortex-X3 core isn’t utilized in the multi-core test. And that’s why the Red Magic 8 Pro may have a slight advantage over the Galaxy due to its beefy cooling system that allows the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 to run at a higher gear. Still, the difference is rather small.

AnTuTu 9

Higher is better


  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    1288866

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    1241531

  • OnePlus 11

    1140661

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    1039412

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    985226

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    968359

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    955884

In the AnTuTu test, the Galaxy S23 Ultra falls behind the Red Magic 8 Pro because the latter has a 1080p+ screen requiring less processing power to render the test. After all, the AnTuTu 9 is a compound test. However, the Galaxy S23 Ultra has a clear advantage over the OnePlus 11, which runs the same chipset and a 1440p+ screen. The higher-clocked CPU and GPU pay off.

The new Snapdragon is also considerably faster than the older Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chip and even the A16 Bionic inside the iPhone 14 Pro Max.

GFX Aztek ES 3.1 High (onscreen)

Higher is better


  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    75

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    54

  • OnePlus 11

    49

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    38

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    36

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    30

GFX Aztek ES 3.1 High (offscreen 1440p)

Higher is better


  • OnePlus 11

    61

  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    61

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    59

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    46

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    41

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    31

GFX Aztek Vulkan High (onscreen)

Higher is better


  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    79

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    60

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    54

  • OnePlus 11

    53

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    39

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    37

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    29

GFX Aztek Vulkan High (offscreen 1440p)

Higher is better


  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    69

  • OnePlus 11

    68

  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    68

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    52

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    51

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    45

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    35

GFX Car Chase ES 3.1 (offscreen 1080p)

Higher is better


  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    127

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    126

  • OnePlus 11

    126

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    118

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    104

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    96

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    76

GFX Car Chase ES 3.1 (onscreen)

Higher is better


  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    97

  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    67

  • OnePlus 11

    57

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    54

  • Xiaomi 12S Ultra

    51

  • Xiaomi 12 Pro

    46

  • Galaxy S22 Ultra (1440p)

    37

3DMark Wild Life Extreme (offscreen 1440p)

Higher is better


  • Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra

    3790

  • ZTE nubia Red Magic 8 Pro

    3643

  • OnePlus 11

    3594

  • iPhone 14 Pro Max

    3341

When it comes to GPU-intensive tasks, the Galaxy version of the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 is a clear winner. In almost all offscreen tests, the Galaxy S23 Ultra took the lead over the rest and fell short only in the onscreen tests when challenged by phones of lower resolution.

All in all, the new Galaxy S23 series offers a substantial upgrade over its predecessors, no matter the version. But European and Indian consumers will likely benefit the most, as the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy blows last year’s Exynos 2200 SoC out of the water.

To put things into perspective, the Galaxy S23 Ultra is 30-35% faster than the Galaxy S22 Ultra in the CPU tests and around 30% faster in the combined AnTuTu 9 benchmark. Across the GFX Bench and 3DMark GPU tests, the Galaxy S23 Ultra showed a whopping 2x performance increase at times, but in most scenarios, it’s an 80-90% improvement.

Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra benchmarks - Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 for Galaxy examined

In addition to the already excellent synthetic performance, the Galaxy S23 series also boasts improved cooling capabilities, which was an issue with for some users in the past. But you might have to wait for our full review of the trio to come out to find out how well the new cooling performs in practice.

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