![]() ![]() Anyone looking for a cheap iPhone should definitely check out the iPhone 11 before looking at a used device. iPhone 13 ProĪpple still sells the iPhone 11, which is a steal at $499. iPhone 13 Pro Geekbench 5 benchmark scores. Things get interesting if we compare the iPhone 13 Po to the older iPhones that Apple still sells, and the best Android alternatives available in stores right now. Image source: Geekbench 5 iPhone 13 benchmark comparisons iPhone 12 Pro Max Geekbench 5 benchmark scores. As seen above, this iPhone 13 Pro version clocks at 3.23GHz, which is a significant upgrade over the iPhone 12 Pro Max’s top speed of 2.99GHz (as seen below). It’s unclear whether it’s the iPhone 13 Pro or Pro Max, but the listing tells us the handset has 6GB of RAM. The Geekbench 5 listing for the iPhone 13 reveals that we’re looking at a Pro model. Early iPhone 13 Pro Geekbench 5 benchmark scores. That’s six years since the phone was first released! The same definitely can’t be said for Android devices. For example, the iPhone 6s from all the way back in 2015 is about to receive Apple’s iOS 15 update on Monday, September 20th. They’ll also continue to get iOS updates for a very long time. Someone buying an iPhone 13 right now might very well end up using it for many years without noticing performance issues. ![]() This sort of performance will ensure that the iPhone 13 buyers have devices that will last for years down the road. So what if the iPhone 13 clocks over 1700 points in single-core tests and over 4800 points in multi-core tests? But the tests show Apple is still leading the pack, by far. And most buyers don’t care about these figures. Android speed comparisons matterīenchmarks alone will never tell the complete story of a device’s performance. That’s to say that the leaker is more than familiar with Android handsets and their performance. Anyone following “Ice” knows he’s been critical of Samsung time and again while comparing the Korean giant’s phones to other Android devices from China. The insider says there’s “only one word left to Android: despair.” That’s an interesting remark considering it’s coming from a dedicated Samsung fan. This brings us to Ice Universe’s tweet below that features the first Geekbench 5 scores for the iPhone 13’s A15 Bionic.Īpple A15 Geekbench score, only one word left to Android: despair. And we know that the iPhone 13 Pro models ship with 6GB of RAM, compared to just 4GB of RAM on the regular iPhone 13 and the 13 mini. Graphics performance aside, all A15 versions pack the same 6-core CPU that we’ve come to expect from Apple’s chipsets. The SoC in the iPhone 13 Pros and the iPad mini features a 5-core GPU compared to the 4-core GPUs for cheaper iPhone 13 models. We also don't have CPU benchmark results for any of Apple's new devices at this point, but all of these are surely coming soon.A15 Bionic performance: ‘Despair’ for Android We don't yet know how the A15 with 4-core GPU would perform, since no one has benchmarked an iPhone 13 or 13 mini yet. Well, that seems to be the case at least when comparing to last year's A14 Bionic with 4-core GPU, as featured in the iPhone 12 Pro. This points to huge GPU performance improvements in the new iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max compared to their direct predecessors.Īpple has called the 5-core GPU version of the A15 "the world's fastest smartphone chip", and promised that it delivers "50% faster graphics performance than any other smartphone chip". The resulting score is 14216, which is about 55% more than the iPhone 12 Pro's 9123. This A15 chip with a 5-core GPU has been tested on Geekbench's compute benchmark using the Metal API today, by someone in possession of an iPhone 13 Pro prototype. While the iPhone 13 and 13 mini have a 4-core GPU, the iPhone 13 Pro and 13 Pro Max, along with the new iPad mini, have a 5-core GPU. They're all powered by the A15 chip, but there are GPU differences between them. As you probably already know, Apple unveiled four new smartphones yesterday - the iPhone 13, 13 mini, 13 Pro, and 13 Pro Max. ![]()
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