- All right. Are you ready? Are you
ready? Let's do this. Samsung Galaxy S20 and S20 Plus review. Let’s just set
the stage here. I think that it is really easy to take the Galaxy S line of
phones for granted. Samsung sells so many of them, more than any other Android
phone in the US, so I know it isn't hip or cool to say that I like the Galaxy S
phones but I usually really like the Galaxy S phones.
Sure, Pixel phones tend to have
better cameras, and OnePlus get a ton of attention and they also tend to cost
less but, there's just something really familiar about the Galaxy S line. It's
like the default Android phone, and so in some ways, Samsung's biggest job with
the S20 and the S20 Plus was to make sure that it didn’t mess up a good thing.
Like for example, I just reviewed the S20 Ultra, this phones big brother and I
think that Samsung overextended itself with the S20 Ultra. These phones though,
they're trying to do a little bit less than the Ultra and so I think they end
up accomplishing more.
There are three big new things about
the Galaxy S20 that you need to know about. First is the new camera system, the
second is that they support 5G, and third, it has a nicer screen with 120Hz
refresh rate. There's also a bunch of little stuff too, like they got rid of
the headphone jack. They also added a bunch of Samsung-y features to the
software but before we get into any of that, let's just not take the design for
granted. It looks a lot like what all Galaxy phones have looked like for a few
years now.
There's curved glass in the back and
metal rails and a screen that is almost perfectly bezel-less but seriously
though, compare this phone to any other Android phone on the market, your
Pixels, your One Pluses or even your Huawei's and I think the S20 is just plain
nicer. I actually think it's nicer than the iPhone 11 Pro, just from a hardware
perspective. Also, the small one, it comes in pink, which is the best colour
option. The camera module on the back is this big oblong rectangle that's off
to the side.
The screen is only interrupted by a
tiny little hole for the selfie camera instead of having a big old notch or a
forehead or whatever. It uses an in-screen finger print sensor which I have to admits
a little bit slower than other biometric methods but I do just fine with it.
Now this thing starts at 1000 bucks and the Plus version is 1200 bucks and so I
know that you can get most of these features for cheaper on other android
phones, but the Galaxy S line just usually manages to feel more like a complete
package.
Samsung is charging a lot of money
for this phone and for that money, you deserve to get a really nice object and
yeah, Samsung delivers. Don't take it for granted. Okay, enough gushing. Let's
talk about the camera, which is the first big new thing you need to know about.
Okay so, actually with the Galaxy S20 Ultra, I had to go into this big long
complicated story about how high megapixel cameras work, but with the S20 and
the S20 Plus, it's a lot easier, mostly. So, the main camera is a more
traditional 12 megapixels and so is the wide-angle camera. The telephoto though
is 64 megapixels.
Samsung says that it needs all those
megapixels to improve the zoom on its telephoto and that actually works. You
can get a better shot zoomed in at three or four X than you can with an iPhone or
even a Pixel. It's still not great, but it's a step up. Now it also can
theoretically go up to 30X but it looks really bad and it definitely loses to
the S20 Ultra at that zoom, but the S20 Ultra costs 400 dollars more and I
really don't think it's worth it to get decent 30X zoom shots. Now I was really
hardon the Galaxy S20 Ultra for auto focus problems and for how it did weird
stuff to faces. The regular S20 though, it’s better for that stuff but it's not
perfect. Focusing is improved and maybe that's because it's using that more
traditional 12-megapixel sensor which uses a more traditional dual pixel auto
focus method. It still hunts for focus just a little bit in video but it's not
awful. Now as for faces, I do think that this phone is a
little bit chiller than the Ultra with the sharpening and the smoothing but
it’s still doing it more than I would like, it's a Samsung phone so it wants to
smooth faces.
You should never ever turn on Bixby
scene detection though if you want the white balance to be any good at all.
What kills me is that if you turn on the Pro mode on these cameras, everything
looks great and if you use the selfie camera and turn off all the smoothing
there, everything looks great. Basically, I feel like if Samsung would just get
out of its own way with the camera, the whole camera system would be right
there with the iPhone 11 Pro and the Pixel 4 but as it is right now, it’s still
a third-place finish.
As a whole package, I do actually
like this better than the Pixel 4 because you get an ultra wide and you get way
better video performance. All right. There are some other features to talk
about. So, you can take 64megapixel photos with this, but even if you do it in
really bright light, when I crop in, I didn’t see enough clean details to make
it worth it. I think night mode is pretty good, it's right in there with the
iPhone and about to the level of the Pixel, better than I expected. And video
quality of course is very good, it's Samsung quality video. It's not quite up
to the level of the iPhone Pro though.
Oh, if you were thinking you wanted
to get the S20 Plus instead of the smaller S20 because it has that time off
light depth vision camera, honestly don't bother. I didn't see any improvement
in portrait photos because of that extra lens. The second thing to know is that
these phones support 5G and I have to be honest, I didn't get a chance to
really test 5G because I'm here in San Francisco where I don't have 5G networks
to test on with the carriers that I have.
I did test 5G on the Ultra back in
New York and it was great but I still think that you shouldn't buy this phone
just because it supports 5G, I just don't think the 5G networks are there yet.
One thing you should know is that the Plus model supports the millimetre wave
version of 5G while the smaller S20 doesn't, but unless you love standing on a
particular street corner to download videos, who cares about millimetre wave.
Now one reason you might anna get the S20 Plus besides the bigger screen, is
battery life.
I mostly tested the smaller S20
which has a 4000-milliamp battery and after everything settled down from the
initial setup, I was getting around five hours of screen time with the high
refresh rate turned on. Brennan tested the S20 Plus which has a 4500-milliamp
battery, he got a little bit more. I think either one can get you through a day
and both really embarrass the Pixel 4 for longevity, but neither one is like
stellar. As for performance, I mean it's great. The only Android phone that's
faster than these phones is probably the Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra.
There's plenty of RAM and the
Snapdragon 865 processor, it seems like the real deal. Still Samsung is doing Samsung
stuff with the software, I could complain about this all day but rather than do
that, I actually wanna tell you what I do to corral Samsung's worst tendencies.
I clean up quick settings first of all, second, I install this app
called Side Actions which lets you reprogram the power and volume buttons to do
the stuff that you actually wanna do like launch you know, the Google Assistant
and set up Bixby.
Next, I install this app called
Edge Calendars which is awesome, it lets you swipe in to see your calendars
right away. I turn off Samsung Daily and I also move the brightness slider up
to the top so it's easier to access. Oh, there's one more setting that I turn
on every time with the Galaxy S20, the 120Hz screen. I don't know if I ever
anna buy a phone again that doesn't have a high refresh rate screen, it's just,
it's so much better. The animations are better, the scrolling is better, it
just, it feels better.
There is a trade off for battery
life though, it is worse if you have the high refresh rate on and Samsung just
locks at 120Hz, it doesn't try and vary it. So, on the small one, if you
definitely need it to last all day, you might wanna ratchet it back to 60Hz.
Samsung also knocks down the screen resolution when you're at 120Hz but I think
that trade off is totally worth it on both sizes of the phone. Again, it just
improves the experience of the phone so much. And of course, the screen is a
typical Samsung screen, which means that it's, it's great. I do think Samsung's
default colors are a little bit too garish, but you can set it to natural and
then it just, it just looks good. Anyway, that's it.
That's the third thing to know about
the S20. The screen is awesome. And I don't think you should ever spend 1000
dollars on a phone again without a high refresh rate screen. Samsung decided to call
this the Galaxy S20 instead of the Galaxy S11 because it has those three
things. The new camera system, support for 5G and the high refresh rate screen.
But I think the camera is only a minor evolutionary upgrade over the S10.
The zoom is really nice, but
otherwise it fundamentally acts like the Samsung cameras that I'm used to.
Good, but not the best. I think 5G is a wash because the support really isn't
there in most cities and although I dearly love the 120Hz refresh rate screen,
I understand that that's a nice to have, it's not an actual functional
improvement. So yeah. In my book, this is more of an S11 than an S20. It's not
a whole new generation but with fundamentals this good, I'll take it. Call it
what you want Samsung. Hey, thanks so much for watching, we went pretty fast in
some of the features on this phone but we went into much more detail on the
Galaxy S20 Ultra review so you should go check that out.



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