It's
time to satisfy your curiosity about the newly announced LG G4's benchmark
performance! The smartphone's announcement had us very interested in it too, as
the LG G4 ships with an unorthodox spec sheet that sees the hexa-core Qualcomm
Snadpragon 808 CPU, Adreno 418 GPU, and 3GB of LPDDR3 ram as its central
pillars. No other smartphone that's currently on the market has the same
configuration.

In the first quarter of
2015, the Android competition has adopted four options. Camp Samsung uses its
own Exynos 7420 chip paired with the ARM Mali T760 GPU. Camps HTC, Sony, and
Xiaomi choose the Snapdragon 810 SoC and its advanced Adreno 430 GPU. And on
the eastern front, there are the Meizu and Huawei camps, which rely upon the
MediaTek MT6595 (PowerVR G6200MP4) and HiSilicon Kirin 930 (Mali -T628 GPU),
respectively. Where does the LG G4 and its Snapdragon 808 position itself in
this challenging landscape? And more importantly, does it deliver the expected
flagship performance? Let's examine the benchmark results and find out!
Of course, one should be fully aware that synthetic benchmarks measure
performance in pre-calculated tasks and scenarios, and are therefore not fully
representative of normal everyday usage performance. What they do is form an
accurate impression of how different smartphones and their specific hardware
components handle themselves under intense load. Trying to assess normal usage
performance via tests is not only impossible due to the subjective nature of
the "normal usage" term, but it doesn't make much sense either. See,
even the low and mid-range Android phones of today have the essential, basic
tasks covered. We need to look beyond that to truly see what a smartphone is capable
of, and that's where the benchmarks come in.
VIEW
ALL
CPU Performance
We use the Vellamo Metal
and Basemark OS 2 tests to assess CPU performance. In these tests, the LG G4's
Snapdragon 808 CPU generally performs great, moving slightly ahead of the
power-hungry Snapdragon 810 CPU in the HTC One M9, and tailgating the Samsung
Galaxy S6 & S6 edge's Exynos 7420 SoC. Although the SD 808 has just two
Cortex-A57 cores, whereas the SD 810 and Exynos 7420 both have four, the 808
performs better than expected. Its results suggest that manufacturers could
have an easier time squeezing peak CPU performance out of the lowlier SD 808 rather than the SD
810,

which is more powerful, but often falls victim to throttling and struggles
to live up to its potential. Still, the 14nm Exynos 7420 is the top dog right
now, while the Kirin 930 (Huawei P8) and MediaTek MT6595 (Meizu MX4) are
unimpressive all-around. Their results boil down to the economical CPU cores
used in both. The Kirin 930 utilizes exclusively Cortex-A53 cores modified by
Huawei, while the MT6595 uses power-efficient Cortex A17 and A7 cores. Still,
it has to be noted that both processors are designed as upper mid-range products,
rather than flagship solutions. Hence, their performance is fair, but it
illustrates a significant gap between "upper mid range performance"
and "flagship performance". One would expect this gap to be narrower
today, no?
3D Performance
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The LG G4 and its
Snapdragon 808 SoC generally position themselves slightly below the Samsung
Galaxy Note 4 and its Snapdragon 805 SoC in the 3D performance tests AnTuTu and
GFXBench. That's a disappointing turnout for a 2015 flagship smartphone, but it
can be easily explained. Hot-headed it is, but the Snapdragon 810, which
spearheads the 3D performance benchmarks, has a killer graphics unit - the
Adreno 430. It reaches more than double the 3D performance of the LG G4'slowlier Adreno 418 GPU in the GFXBench rendering tests. The Adreno 430 even outguns
the Mali T760 found in the Galaxy S6 & S6 edge's Exynos 7420 CPU,

while
Huawei and Meizu's upper mid-range solutions finish after the LG G4's Adreno 418,
which is already behind the Snapdragon 805's Adreno 420 GPU (as measured in the
Samsung Galaxy Note 4). However, it has to be considered that the Adreno 430 in
the HTC One M9 is powering a 1080p display, which means it doesn't need to deal
with as many pixels as a 2K resolution device, such as the LG G4, would have
to. We'd assume that the odds would be evened out to an extent, if the Adreno
430 were to handle a QHD screen.
System performance
The AnTuTu test gives a
good all-around perspective over system performance under load comparable to
that of intense general usage. Unfortunately, the LG G4 is once again unable to
stand up to flagship performance expectations.
The AnTuTu results position it
above the Snapdragon 805 in the Galaxy Note 4, and near general ballpark of
HiSilicon and MediaTek's processors, which might be a good achievement on its own, but pales in
comparison to flagship silicon performance. The Snapdragon 810 in the HTC One
M9 runs significantly faster than the SD 808, Kirin 930, and MT6595 processors,
only to be eclipsed by the Samsung Exynos 7420 in the Galaxy S6 edge.
Conclusion
All things considered, the LG G4 can be identified as an upper mid-range
smartphone that incorporates flagship display and camera technologies. What
does that mean in practical terms? We believe the most noticeable performance
impact will be felt in heavy 3D gaming and 4K video recording scenarios, where
the LG G4's "not quite there" graphics unit and older memory
technology won't be able to deliver consistently smooth, effortless
performance. To the strictly specs-minded buyer, the LG G4 probably doesn't
seem like a good proposition in comparison to the Galaxy S6 edge at the
high-end price point, or to Chinese "affordable flagships" at the low
and mid-price point. But if we look at the vast majority of customers, the ones
who are mostly after attractive design, a bright colorful display, and a solid
camera, we think the LG G4 has what it takes to win their attention.