With Samsung's launch of the Galaxy S7/S7 Edge last night, the mystery of Samsung's first self built processor Exynos 8890 was finally unveiled, and its GeekBench showed up in large numbers Running points library Its single core score is stable at about 2150, and its multi-core score is stable at about 6400.
Compared with the single core score of 2300 points and the multi-core score of 5400 points of the Snapdragon 820, its single core performance still has a certain gap, about 7%. But with the advantage of many cores, 8890 is about 1000 points ahead of Snapdragon 820 in multi-core performance, about 16% ahead, but the gap in multi-core performance is slightly lower than expected. On the whole, the performance difference between the two is not very big. How they perform in actual use depends on how Samsung optimizes them. In addition, the biggest impact on users is the difference in power consumption between the two. In the case of small performance differences, the more power saving side will undoubtedly have more advantages.