Long-term review: Is the Samsung Galaxy
S8 still the Android phone you should pick?
Samsung made a big splash with its S8
and S8+ handsets, and considering how flat the Note 7 fell, it was a necessary
move. It’s been a few months now since the S8 hit shelves, and with the Note 8
coming later in the month, is the S8 still the best phone you can buy?
Yes, I think it is. But the competition
is strong, and the S8 isn’t a clear winner in every area.
Take the camera, for example. Many
flagships have excellent cameras, and the S8 is certainly one such device, but
the HTC U11 and Google Pixel just edge it thanks to sharper pictures and more
natural colour reproduction. Performance, too, is an area in which the S8 has
already started to flounder. It’s by no means slow, but the OnePlus 5 and the
iPhone 7 both feel nippier in everyday use.
The Galaxy S8 remains the best-looking
phone out there, however. The curved front and back, along with that stunning
Infinity Display, combine to create a device that feels futuristic – and one
that will continue to do so for some time to come. For the most part the design
has survived daily use.
I have to admit that I’ve smashed one S8
by dropping it off my bed onto the floor, although the pricey replacement I’ve
subsequently dropped has escaped unscathed. I’ve taken to keeping the device
well protected in a case – one of Peel’s very thin ones – and, aside from a
mark on the screen, it’s held up well.
There’s no doubt that the display is
well engineered, but it still stands as the finest screen on any phone I’ve
used. It’s obviously high in resolution, but the deep and rich colours produced
by the large AMOLED panel make it a joy to use.
There’s been a distinct lack of anything
to really test the HDR prowess of the phone, which is a shame, but hopefully
we’ll see that change in the future. The only handset likely to have an equally
impressive display this year is the Note 8, or possibly the rumoured AMOLED
iPhone 8.
There are plenty of fantastic Android
phones on the market right now, and you certainly don’t have to spend the
eye-wateringly high price of the Samsung Galaxy S8 for a solid experience. But
you get what you pay for, and there’s enough going on in the S8 to make it
worth the outlay. Even when the Note 8 arrives, I think the smaller size of the
S8 will continue to make it the go-to choice.
What is the Samsung Galaxy S8?
Phones have become a little stale.
Whether it’s an iPhone 7, Huawei P10, Sony Xperia XZ Premium or any other
flagship phone, they all look and feel the same. But just when I thought a
phone couldn’t surprise and delight me any more, the Samsung Galaxy S8 has
proven me wrong.
From the moment I picked up the S8 – and
its larger, 6.2-inch sibling the Galaxy S8+ – I realised it was even more
special than I expected. This is a phone that feels innovative, a phone that I
can’t help but recommend – even if it will set you back £689/$720.
Samsung Galaxy S8 release date and price
The Galaxy S8 goes on sale globally on
April 28 and is priced at £689 in the UK or $720 in the US if you want to buy
it outright.
Samsung Galaxy S8 – Design
Nothing comes close to the Galaxy S8
design-wise. It’s the best-looking phone I’ve ever seen, leaving every other
handset trailing in its wake.
The curved rear, as seen on the Galaxy
S7, nestles perfectly in your palm, while the glass shimmers as the light hits
it. The device is available in three colours – a dark black, bright silver and
a grey with a blueish tinge – with no ugly white front plate in sight.
My review unit is the black option, and
it’s properly black all over, with shiny sides that blend into the display. It
feels like one complete piece, with the glass, screen and metal combining all
together.
The volume rocker and standby switch are
joined by a new button on the side. This is a dedicated Bixby button – which
I’ll cover in more detail in the Software section – and while it shows Samsung
is taking its new virtual assistant seriously, it feels too much for Bixby to
have its own button.
The S8 is thin and incredibly light at
155g, but it feels sturdy and precisely made. The last time Samsung opted for a
huge change of direction with its flagship, many of the basic features were
lost in the transition. Thankfully, this isn’t the case here. A microSD slot
continues to sit tucked away with the nano-SIM, the criminally underrated Qi
wireless charging is also present, and the device is IP68 water- and
dust-resistant too, so it will survive a dunk in water for 30 minutes to depths
of 1.5 metres.
Samsung has also retained the headphone
jack; I’d be very surprised to hear that anyone thinks that’s a bad idea.
Apple’s decision to remove a physical headphone connection looked like it might
signal the demise of the 3.5mm jack, but Samsung has gone in the other
direction, by including a pair of very good AKG wired buds in the box.
Like the recently launched LG G6, the
front of the Samsung Galaxy S8 is almost all screen – and it’s this that really
makes the S8 stand out. Unlike with the G6, though, the display here melts into
the sturdy metal rim.
It’s a much subtler curve than on the
Galaxy S7 Edge; far more like the ill-fated Galaxy Note 7 in fact, which makes
it a lot easier to use. Accidental touches were common on older Edge phones,
with your hand hitting the screen when you were just holding the device, but I
haven’t experienced this with the S8. There’s still a bit of extra reflection
on this portion of the screen, but it’s a small trade-off for such an
eye-catching look.
As with any phone, though, not
everything is perfect. Having such a big display and tiny bezel means there’s
no room for the fingerprint-sensing Home button to sit on the front.
Instead, it’s on the back, next to the
camera, and I hate it more every time I use it. First, it’s tiny, meaning those
times I actually hit it, it doesn’t recognise my finger. But its real issue is
the positioning; it’s so unintuitive. You have to wiggle your finger around the
camera – which, incidentally, throws up a message on opening the app to remind
you to clean dirty smudges of the lens – and guess where the scanner is?
I don’t understand why it isn’t at the
centre, as it is every other phone that has a rear-mounted fingerprint scanner.
I suspect Samsung wanted to build it into the display, but just ran out of
time.
I’m also not convinced about how well
this phone will hold up after months and years of use. The addition of Gorilla
Glass 5 on both the front and back should offer a little more protection, but
I’ve ended up with both a cracked Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S7 after drops onto
carpet from barely 2ft high. Hopefully, things will be different with the
Galaxy S8 – but it feels like a delicate phone.
The phone is also prone to showing
fingerprints, but that’s par for the course with this amount of glass and shiny
metal. I’d go with the Midnight Grey colour option if you’re really averse to
smudges.
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Samsung Galaxy S8 – Screen
Not only has Samsung crafted what is, in
my opinion, the best-looking phone out there, but it’s slapped on the finest
display too. Although, when you consider that Samsung has demonstrated the best
screen tech for a number of years, this isn’t really a surprise.
There’s more to the display than just
the curves. First, it has a new aspect ratio of 18.5:9, rather than 16:9. This
means it’s taller, essentially giving you more space in a body that isn’t that
much bigger than that of the S7. While the Galaxy S7 had a 5.1-inch display,
the S8 bumps that to 5.8.
It sounds huge, but the phone itself is
compact and Samsung is keen to point out that it can still be used comfortably
in one hand. I wouldn’t say that you can do quite ‘everything’ with one hand –
especially reaching to pull down the notification tray – but this is far from a
phablet.
The 5.8-inch display size is in some
ways deceiving, however. Don’t pick up this phone thinking it will have the
same size of screen as the Nexus 6P or HTC U Ultra in a much smaller body. This
is a tall screen and it’s bigger than the S7, but it’s much narrower than
proper phablets. Width-wise, it’s barely wider than an iPhone 7 and noticeably
narrower than the Pixel XL.
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