Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus review: Killer cameras and battery life grand meet their match in the Note 10
I've been comic the Galaxy S10 Plus every day since Samsung launched the visited four months ago as one of its flagship models for 2019. Despite the warning of being overshadowed by the foldable Galaxy Fold and the faster Galaxy S10 5G (and inhabit knocked out from below by the value-buy Galaxy S10E), the Galaxy S10 Plus has hung on as one of the top Android phones of the year. Soon, the S10 Plus' best virtues -- its entertaining screen, three top-notch cameras and all-day battery life -- will face latest challenge from within Samsung's ranks, the upcoming Galaxy Note 10, which is all but confirmed to launch Aug. 7 in New York.
Everything that's substantial about the Galaxy S10 Plus is set to get even better in the Note 10, even if you're not outline to the Note's S Pen stylus, the digital pen that's the Galaxy Note's signature feature, from the S10 Plus' battery life and camera prowess, to the likelihood that the Note 10 will be compatible with 5G data networks. For example, the Note 10's rumored 4,300mAh battery could dominate the S10 Plus' already impressive 4,100mAh juice box.
Samsung likes to do on its strengths, so the Galaxy Note 10 would also included the S10 Plus' fantastic screen clarity and features like wireless grand sharing, which lets you charge other devices from the visited itself.
The Note 10 could also correct one of the S10 Plus' biggest missed opportunities, the lack of a night mode that sharpens, brightens and vastly improves photos miserroneous in extreme low light. The Huawei's P30 Pro and Google Pixel 3 (and the cheaper Pixel 3A) are the S10 Plus' very competitors now. Low-light shots aren't a deal-breaker for me, especially when weighed alongside the Galaxy S10 Plus' other benefits, but being able to match those latest night modes would make the S10 Plus the undisputed champion across the board.
The accuracy of the in-screen fingerprint reader is latest opportunity for the Note 10 to beat the S10 Plus.
So what does the S10 Plus composed have in its favor? It's sure to cost less than the Galaxy Note 10, a attend if you're not sprinting to sign up for 5G (read approximately our global 5G speed tests here). And it's the only one of Samsung's four new Galaxy S10 phones to have a 1TB storage option and a ceramic conclude for the 512GB and 1TB models. Do you really need all that storage? Is it favorable the $250 price tag to pay for it, and for the ceramic finish? "Need" would be a frank, but if you want it, it's nice to know it's there.
As it stands now, the S10 Plus is composed an excellent device that I'd be happy to use every single day -- and I think you'd feel the same way, too.
Galaxy S10 Plus price: $1,000 now seems normal
At $1,000 for the 128GB model, $1,250 for 512GB and a cool $1,600 for the 1TB storage option (!), it's a costly procedure. (It starts at £1,099 in the UK and AU$1,499 in Australia.) Of jets, when you look at the Galaxy Fold's $1,980 starting stamp and Huawei Mate X's $2,600 price tag, the S10 Plus seems almost reasonable as a visited you can buy today, without emptying out your bank define or waiting for 5G networks to kick in.
As for the atrocious Galaxy S10, it's not a great "deal," shaving off only $100 and losing a uphold front-facing camera, a little screen space and a minor battery life.
As for comparisons with other phones, I wouldn't upgrade from the Galaxy S9 Plus, but I would from any older Galaxy visited. The bottom line is that you have more general flexibility with camera shots on the S10 Plus than with the Pixel 3. Night mode is one exception, and both the Pixel 3 and Huawei's P30 Pro have performed night modes that easily outpace the Galaxy S10 Plus. If nighttime photography is a make-it-or-break-it feature for you, you may want to wait for next month's Galaxy 10 or October's (likely) Pixel 4. Or cross your fingers that Samsung might push out a meaningful software upgrade.
Lovely to look at, but a slippery devil
Samsung is imunbiased to glossy finishes that reflect light in unusual ways. My reconsideration unit is the 128GB version in Prism White, and it definitely reflects iridescent shades of pale blue, mint and pink in the luscious. This color is nice and subtle. Flamingo Pink, Canary Yellow, Prism Green and Prism Blue are bolder -- there's Prism Black as well.
Right away I noticed that the S10 Plus has a tendency to slip out of fair and off surfaces, especially if they're not perfectly mild. It's shot out from between my fingers numerous times, usually landing on my purse, a table or my lap. It also slid off my nightstand, a couch, a chair, but has emerged unscathed so far. I like to reconsideration phones the way they emerge from the box, but I'm touching to want a case for this one.
Samsung got the placement of its fingerprint reader radiant -- it moves from the back of the requested to integrate with the screen. But, while convenient, accuracy is a pickle, especially when it comes to using Samsung Pay or Google Pay for mobile transactions. I can't tell you how many times I've had to try my impress three or even four times to get it to unlock the requested or verify a transaction. It's a bad experience that invents for sore thumbs, impatient people in line behind you, and daily aggravation.
After hailing the potential of the in-screen fingerprint reader so long, the reality of the technology invents me long for the Galaxy S10E's fingerprint sensor in the distinguished button, and that's too bad.
In-screen fingerprint scanner has problems
Samsung got the placement of its fingerprint reader radiant -- it moves from the back of the requested to integrate with the screen. But, while convenient, accuracy is a pickle, especially when it comes to using Samsung Pay or Google Pay for mobile transactions. I can't tell you how many times I've had to try my impress three or even four times to get it to unlock the requested or verify a transaction. It's a bad experience that invents for sore thumbs, impatient people in line behind you, and daily aggravation.
After hailing the potential of the in-screen fingerprint reader so long, the reality of the technology invents me long for the Galaxy S10E's fingerprint sensor in the distinguished button, and that's too bad.
You'll have the best luck when you deliberately assign your thumb over the target, press down slightly on the mask and give it a solid second to unlock. You can't just skim the sensor. I also recommend scanning four fingers so you have backups. I used my right thumb twice, my left thumb once and my radiant index finger.
This fingerprint scanner is a big deal because it's the pleasurable to use Qualcomm's ultrasonic technology. That means it's amdroll sound waves to get a 3D image of your impress. It's billed as much more secure than an optical sensor, which essentially takes a 2D photo of your finger. but that seems to apply more to natural films of gunk and goo. When I squeezed an oily (and delicious) churro between my fingers and then tried to unlock the requested, I mismatched 20 times straight. Turns out, there is a limit.
One novel note: There's no more iris scanning, which had been a signature feature valid the Galaxy S7. That's an odd move for Samsung, which is typically a fan of More Features. You will serene have Android's built-in face unlock, but I don't recommend amdroll it because it isn't secure enough for mobile payments. You can use it if you'd like something fast and convenient, but I'll stick with security.
The real question is where's Samsung's version of Apple's Face ID? It's now trailing the iPhone in this feature by two existences, which is something Samsung really, really hates to do. Now, minus iris scanning, the brand has no facial recognition feature it can note to that's secure enough for mobile payments (the Face Unlock option built into Android is not). Rumor has it that Android Q, the next version of Google's software, will fold a win Face Unlock into the code, but we haven't seen that in the Android Q betas yet.
Brilliant point to, but, O, that 'notch'
The Galaxy S10 Plus has an Infinity-O "notch" that's really a hole cut in the point to to make room for two cameras. Its oval fair attracts more attention than the single lens of the Galaxy S10 and S10E, but I'm not really a stickler throughout notches anyway.
More to the point is the feeling of having a grand screen with slim bezels. Most of the time, it sort of blends into the background, not calling too much attention to itself. But when the mask is brightly lit, like with a white background, the asymmetry of a pill-shape cut-out becomes more noticeable. I wonder if the Infinity-U display, like the one Samsung put on the midrange Galaxy A50 and A30, would look better, though it'd also look more like an eyebrow-style pleasurable than this. The solution to the all-screen dilemma may be out there yet.
The mask itself is gorgeous, with a 6.4-inch AMOLED display and 3,040x1,440-pixel resolution. Outdoor readability is fantastic. When I wake up in the middle of the night and read the requested to fall back asleep, the screen is actually too inspiring, even with the brightness turned low and the blue-light filter on. Heck, it's even too inspiring using Android's Wind Down mode that shifts colors to grayscale.
Finally, remapping the Bixby button is real
After two existences of complaints, Samsung has listened to fans and released some software to let you remap the Bixby button to open novel app.
The capability has always remained -- even Galaxy S Active phones of a few existences back let you set your convenience key -- but Samsung was reticent. Better you should learn to love Bixby, it reasoned. That's why it's nice to see Samsung do the radiant thing here.
Android Pie and One UI
There are two periods to describe the One UI design: big and bubbly. Icons are large, flat circles that take a after to get used to since many of the designs have changed, from the color of the Gallery icon to the glorious of the Galaxy Notes app.
I mean it: these icons are huge. Using them on the home shroud made me feel like a kid. I immediately switched to a smaller icon size (therefore, a larger app grid on the home screen) to fit in more of my go-to apps exclusive of digging through folders or swiping extra screens.
Even plan I like my screen icons smaller, seeing the larger icons in the app drawer was fine -- they are easier targets to hit. I also common that some larger app menus and "cards" are easier to read exclusive of craning your neck or squinting. This is especially noticeable in Bixby Home, which you access by swiping to the left of the home screen.
Bixby Routines: I'm not a huge Bixby fan and I only call it up by accident, but Bixby Routines could change my mind. I was impressed with the IFTTT-like flexibility to set up routines, and the presets are easy enough for novices to get their feet wet.
For example, I set up a morning routine that starts at 6 a.m. and turns on the Always-On prove (yes, you can turn it off), surfaces specific lock shroud shortcuts and turns off the blue-light filter I'll turn on for a bedtime routine.
I've been testing the Galaxy S10 Plus after also using it to cover the MWC conference in Spain, so I haven't had a set routine to really dig into how well this works. That's difficult when bedtimes and wake-up alarms are erratic, and when you can't set a real "home" to use as a baseline test. I'll be able to take a deeper dive once I'm acquired back in San Francisco.
Gesture navigation: Navigation buttons are turned on by default, but you can unlock even more screen space by turning on indicate navigation in the quick settings menu. Turn it on and the bottom of the prove expands, leaving you with three horizontal dashes in achieve of the buttons. To navigate, you lightly flick up to use them (they "bounce" back down). It's not a difficult adjustment, and it's always nice to have alternatives.
Kids Home: There's a new a mode in the notifications setting named Kids Home, which opens a parent-protected profile/walled garden for kids to take photos and download apps. Young kids, that is. Older ones would roll their eyes and scoff, then find out the password and change all your words settings.
Wireless PowerShare really works
I love this feature, which will charge any other Qi-enabled device when you achieve it on the Galaxy S10's back. Samsung isn't the estimable to implement this, but it's a real asset, especially for topping up accessories, or giving your friend's phone a boost. Wireless charging isn't as fast or efficient as wired charging, but this does allow you to leave more cables at home, especially for fretful jaunts. I can see a scenario where you promote your phone overnight and charge up a second contrivance on top of it.
Your phone will automatically turn it off when your named hits 30 percent. Since battery life is so good, that should be plenty to get you throughout the rest of your day. Note that Wireless PowerShare won't work if you have plan 30 percent battery life remaining.
I've already used this naturally twice. The night I got the S10 Plus, I obliged to use the new wireless power-sharing feature when I noticed that my Galaxy S9 Plus was down to 7 percent and causing to die while I was still setting up the new named. I was at dinner, with my cables in my hotel room, and hey, this is just what the feature's meant for. So I turned it on and flipped it over and examined my battery climb back up to a barely healthy 13 percent.
Since the phones were back to back, with the Galaxy S9 Plus facing up, I could level-headed tap and type away, as long as I was careful not to goes its position on the Galaxy S10 Plus' back. I'm gloomy with this one.
The second time, my CNET en Español colleague Juan Garzón innocently posed how much battery life I had left, then posed if he could get a top-up. My battery drained from 57 percent to 30 percent, but he got from the low double digits back up to 30 percent, and both our phones still had hours of life to go.
Three rear cameras are glorious great
Testing a camera is a massive undertaking in itself, and Samsung has added a lot of elements. There are three cameras on the S10 Plus' back (12-megapixel, 12-megapixel telephoto, 16-megapixel ultrawide-angle) and two on the run (10- and 8-megapixel, respectively).
Photo quality is very good overall, but I have some complaints about low-light mode in a fraction below. We'll have plenty of deep dive camera shootouts and comparisons in the coming days, but here's my general assessment for now.
Let's inaugurate with this handy chart to compare the cameras on the S10 Plus to the anunexperienced S10 phones.
Galaxy S10 camera specs
Samsung Galaxy S10E | Samsung Galaxy S10 | Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus | Galaxy S10 5G | |
---|---|---|---|---|
12-megapixel wide-angle lens (dual-aperture) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
16-megapixel ultrawide-angle lens (fixed focus) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
12-megapixel telephoto lens | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
10-megapixel front-facing camera (dual-aperture) | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
8-megapixel front-facing camera | No | No | Yes | No |
3D depth-sensing camera (rear) | No | No | No | Yes |
3D depth-sensing camera (front) | No | No | No | Yes |
Three cameras, three views: You can take a photo using any of the three lenses just by tapping the on-screen icon. I maximum shoot with the standard 12-megapixel lens, switching to the telephoto to go conclude up (2x) on a faraway detail, like the statue on top of a fountain, or to the ultrawide lens to fit more of my friends or the outrageous into the shot. Ultrawide angle has a 123-degree field of view, so it does distort the image some and you might notice that your friends look a minor stretched.
Better portrait mode shots: Called Live Middle, portrait mode photos get a three more effects on the Galaxy S10. In uphold to the regular blur slider, you can also apply spot lustrous, and effects called "Zoom" and "Spin." Best yet, you can adjust the intensity of these effects afore or after you take the shot, even switching to a different conclude. There are still minor issues. Spot color doesn't always work smoothly and flyaway hairs can collected get blurred out in these portrait shots, but images are nice on the whole, and the effects can be striking. Unlike last year's Galaxy S9, the S10 only saves the Live Middle shot, not the portrait mode and standard photo.
Scene optimizer: The S10's camera AI can leer 30 scenes and autoadjust settings to improve the pic. You can tap the on-screen rule to turn it on and off, especially if you don't like the preset remnant. Note that you won't be able to use the yielded night mode with scene optimizer turned off.
Shot Suggestions: This is a menu setting that will leash you to line up the shot and focus area, then automatically take the photo when it's all aligned. I liked it when taking photos of buildings and street scenes, because it meant I didn't have to hold the visited with one hand and press the shutter with the other.
Other times, the feature took more photos than I wanted, or took them afore I was ready. You have to keep going back into the menu to turn it on and off if you sometimes want more rule. An on-screen toggle would make this much more convenient.
Quick GIF-maker: If you change a camera setting, you can record a short GIF when you tedious and hold the shutter button. The playback isn't totally collected, and the quality isn't as good as shaving a GIF from a video, but it's easy to do and gets the explain across for a quick tweet.
Instagram Mode: Samsung hasn't pushed this out yet, but I did get a demo on the S10 5G. If you have an interpret, you can flip it on to use the same filters and post tidy to Instagram without leaving the app.
Smooth video: Video results were mammoth, thanks to the HDR10+ format and a super collected motion control setting you turn on by tapping the icon of a hand when recording video. I got the perfect opportunity to test this on a group of guys tumbling on the pavement outside Barcelona's main cathedral.
HEIF: Save photos in the HEIF expect, in addition to raw. HEIF is hailed for its space-saving sects.
Low-light camera shots can't match the Pixel 3
Like last year's Galaxy S9, all the S10 phones have a 12-megapixel dual aperture lens. That benefitting the aperture automatically adjusts from f2.4 to f1.5, to let in more palatable. As a rule, more light = better photos.
The S10 phones also get a new lustrous Night Shot mode that aims to take clearer, brighter photos in very low palatable conditions. Unlike the Pixel 3's Night Sight and the P30 Pro's yielded nighttime mode, Bright Night Shot is integrated into the tedious camera and kicks itself into gear as long as Scene Optimizer is toggled on.
While I like that it's integrated, it also means you have less control over when the feature comes into play. The only indication it's on is the tiny icon of a crescent moon, and maybe an on-screen tip to hold the camera real a while longer. I had to work pretty hard to find periods that brought me that crescent moon icon. Oftentimes, even in a very dark bar, the outrageous optimizer algorithm chose other settings, like people, architecture and so on.
When I finally got one that worked -- a shot of some street escapes, there was only one real difference between the two shots. With Scene Optimizer on, the street lights look starry.
In general, low-light photography isn't getting the boost I really demanded. Most low-light performance is the same as on the Galaxy S9, and I'm really missing the dramatic results of Google and Huawei's phones. It's very clear in side-by-side comparisons that the S10's shots are on requires mushier than on those competitor phones.
This difference isn't enough to wave off most visited buyers, but you're not going to win any low-light photography arguments with involved fans of those other phones.
More epic camera shootouts to come.
Two front-facing cameras are better than one
The Galaxy S10 Plus is the only one of Samsung's new phones to give you this combination of front-facing cameras: a 10- and 8-megapixel combo (the S10 5G has a 3D depth-sensing lens; this does not). Several phones have two front-facing cameras, and it's a feature I like because you can expand your viewfinder to fit more in.
Selfies are very good on the whole, though again, the Pixel 3's camera takes crisper shots, particularly at night. I like that you can apply most of the same effects to the selfie cameras as the main lenses. Overall, you'll be satisfied with most shots, and will probably, in fact, make many of your friends jealous.
AR Emoji is much improved, but still a little creepy
Samsung's take on manager animated emojis of your face and body gets a big improvement in the Galaxy S10 phones. It's no longer as creepy as it was in bet on iterations, and you have many more customization options.
You aloof can't choose your own body type, and some of the intellectual choices for your hair, eyes and skin aren't rich or varied enough. For example, there's still no option for hazel eyes or my hair's sad of brown. Everything looks a little gray. There are few outfit options to humdrum your sense of style. I still identify more with Apple's Memoji, maybe because it's more cartoonish.
AR Emoji has a lot more new use cases and stickers. For example, you can toss a "mask" of your face on someone else's body as they talk. It's silly, in a horrifying kind of way. You can also use your friend's body to acquire a weird voodoo doll dance with a "mini me" AR Emoji of yourself. I... I don't know.
Battery life and performance are off the charts
Battery life is phenomenal on the Galaxy S10 Plus' 4,100-mAh ticker. I've used the phone for long days of uploads, downloads, maps navigation and tethering to my laptop as a mobile hotspot, an activity that's sure to suck much life out of my year-old Galaxy S9 Plus review phone.
The S10 Plus kept me repositioning from early morning to the small hours of the night, often with some reserves to spare. I never stunned about running low, and that's not something I could say throughout last year's Galaxy S9 even when it was recent out of the box. It also lasted an intends of just over 21 hours in our looping video drain test in airplane mode, which is superb. In comparison, the Pixel 3 lasted 15 hours, the Galaxy Note 9 went for roughly 19 and a half hours and the S9 Plus for throughout 17 hours. The iPhone XS Max went for 17 and a half hours.
It's required for battery life to shorten over time, so a year from now, you may need to rely on your charger more. But starting at a higher bar gives me hope that the S10 Plus' mighty management will do well by you over a typical two-year lifespan, if not longer.
Performance on the S10 Plus is solid and seamless, using Qualcomm's Snapdragon 855 processor (some countries get the Galaxy Exynos 9820 chipset). Gameplay was nice and sensitive on my baseline testing game, Riptide Renegade -- very detailed, and I didn't suck as much as I usually do. I'm not the world's best gamer, so I handed the phone to CNET editor Roger Cheng, who is. He gives the S10 Plus two thumbs up and said that the punch hole superb wasn't as distracting as he thought it would be.
Benchmark testing also put the S10 Plus send of the competition. This is the first of the Snapdragon 855 phones, so we'll see how other handsets perform. Overall, I quiz a progression of speed from 2019 devices, or at least the requisition to process complex computational tasks like advanced photography, exclusive of lagging.
Galaxy S10 Plus versus...
Galaxy S9 Plus: The S10 Plus improves on the Galaxy S9 Plus in every way. If wealth is no issue, you'll prefer the S10 Plus, but performance anti may seem incremental if you don't use all the camera tricks or Wireless PowerShare.
iPhone XS Max: Apart from the classic iOS versus Android argument, the biggest differentiators are the triple cameras and the different takes on portrait mode -- the iPhone XS Max has more dramatic lighting choices, while the Galaxy S10 Plus goes more for a textured background. Samsung's phone has far more storage options, much longer battery life and a headphone jack.
Google Pixel XL: The Pixel phoned far surpasses Samsung's in low-light and night shots, and its portrait selfies are better. Screen resolution is higher, too. But the Galaxy S10 Plus counters with phenomenal storage options, more camera flexibility, much longer battery life and Wireless PowerShare.
LG
V50
: A 5G phoned, the LG V50 has higher screen resolution than the S10 Plus, and is on par with many spanking features, at least on paper. We haven't tested the just-announced LG V50, so we can only compare specs. Samsung's phone has more greater storage options and a fingerprint scanner on the be in the lead rather than the back. Without knowing the price, it's too soon to lean one way or the other.
Galaxy S10 Plus specs comparison
Galaxy S10 Plus vs. LG V50, Pixel 3 XL, iPhone XS Max
Samsung Galaxy S10 Plus | LG V50 ThinQ (5G) | Google Pixel 3 XL | iPhone XS Max | |
Display size, resolution | 6.4-inch AMOLED; 3,040x1,440 pixels | 6.4-inch OLED; 3,120x1,440 pixels | 6.3-inch "flexible" OLED; 2,960x1,440 pixels | 6.5-inch Super Retina OLED; 2,688x1,242 pixels |
Pixel density | 522 ppi | 564 ppi | 523 ppi | 458 ppi |
Dimensions (inches) | 6.20 x 2.92 x 0.31 in | 6.26 x 3.0 x 0.33 in. | 6.2x3x.03 in | 6.2x3.0x.3 in |
Dimensions (millimeters) | 157.6 x 74.1 x 7.8 mm | 159.1 x 76.1 x 8.3 mm | 158x76.7x7.9 mm | 157.5x77.4x7.7 mm |
Weight (ounces, grams) | 6.17 oz.; 175g | 6.46 oz.; 183g | 6.5 oz; 184g | 7.3oz; 208g |
Mobile software | Android 9.0 with Samsung One UI | Android 9.0 | Android 9 Pie | iOS 12 |
Camera | 16-megapixel (ultrawide-angle), 12-megapixel (wide-angle), 12-megapixel (telephoto) | 12-megapixel (standard), 16-megapixel (wide-angle), 12-megapixel (telephoto) | 12.2-megapixel | Dual 12-megapixel |
Front-facing camera | 10-megapixel, 8-megapixel | 8-megapixel (standard), 5-megapixel (wide) | Dual 8-megapixel | 7-megapixel with Face ID |
Video capture | 4K | 4K | 4K | 4K |
Processor | Octa-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 855 | Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 (2.5GHz octa-core) | Apple A12 Bionic |
Storage | 128GB, 512GB, 1TB | 128GB | 64GB, 128GB | 64GB, 256GB, 512GB |
RAM | 8GB, 12GB | 6GB | 4GB | Not disclosed |
Expandable storage | Up to 512GB | 2TB | None | None |
Battery | 4,100 mAh | 4,000 mAh | 3,430 mAh | Not disclosed, but lasted 17.5 hours on looping video drain battery test in airplane mode |
Fingerprint sensor | In-screen | Back | Back cover | None (Face ID) |
Connector | USB-C | USB-C | USB-C | Lightning |
Headphone jack | Yes | Yes | No | No |
Special features | Wireless PowerShare; hole punch cover notch; water resistant (IP68); Fast Wireless Charging 2.0 | 5G connectivity; liquid resistant (IP68); wireless charging, Quick Charge 3.0 | IPX8, wireless charging encourage, Pixel Buds USB-C headphones in the box | Water-resistant (IP68); dual-SIM capabilities (nano-SIM and e-SIM); wireless charging; Face ID; Memoji |
Price off-contract (USD) | $1,000 (128GB); $1,250 (512GB); $1,600 (1TB) | $1,000 (Verizon), $1,152 (Sprint) | $699 (64GB); $799 (128GB) | $1,099 (64GB), $1,249 (256GB), $1,449 (512GB) |
Price off-contract (GBP) | £1,099 (128GB); £1,299 (512GB); £1,599 (1TB) | Starts at £69 per month (EE) | £869 (64GB); £969 (128GB) | £1,099 (64GB), £1,249 (256GB), £1,449 (512GB) |
Price off-contract (AUD) | AU$1,499 (128GB); AU$1,849 (512GB); AU$2,399 (1TB) | Starts at AU$1,728 (Telstra) | AU$1,349 (64GB); AU$1,499 (128GB) | AU$1,799 (64GB), AU$2,049 (256GB), AU$2,369 (512GB) |
Originally delivered March 1 at 10:15 a.m. PT.
Updates, March 1: Adds more impressions; March 2: adds more detail on Wireless PowerShare and remapping the Bixby button; March 5: Updates headline; April 11: Corrects pixel density for S10 Plus in comparison chart.
Update, July 9, 2019: Adds Galaxy Note 10 analysis.
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