PC World (2019-04)

(Antfer) #1
APRIL 2019 PCWorld 37

smoothing filter rather than even trying to suss
out finer details that were clearly visible with
the Pixel 3. I’d love to see a Pixel-style Night
Mode for Samsung phones at some point,
maybe even later this year as part of the Note
9’s feature set.
Around the front, Samsung has
augmented the standard 10MP f/1.9 lens
with a second 8MP RGB depth
camera with a slightly wider 90
FOV. If you take a lot of selfies
you’ll appreciate the edge
detailing and depth-of-field
adjustments, but there’s nothing
here that isn’t also available on
the S10’s single front camera.
I didn’t have a standard S10 to
compare it to, but the S10+
definitely outperformed the S9’s
front camera in basically every
facet, as you can see above.
However, as it stands the second
front camera seems like a missed
opportunity. I would have rather
seen an ultra-wide second camera
like on the Pixel 3 or a 3D camera
for facial recognition.

BOTTOM LINE
There’s no denying that the Galaxy
S10 is the absolute cream of the
premium Android phone crop
right now. It has the fastest
processor, the most RAM, the

S10+ wasn’t fooled into unnatural adjustments.
Nighttime and low light are a different
story. While I was extremely impressed with
the S10+’s ability to focus quickly in extremely
low light, the pictures I snapped had far less
detail than the ones I took with the Pixel 3. In
some instances, it looked as though
Samsung’s post-processing engine applied a


The S10+ (left) handles color exceptionally well, even besting
the Pixel 3 in this rainbow of candy.


If you look at the detail on the ceiling in this shot, the S10+ (left)
is no match for the Pixel 3. Shoot, look at the ground as well!

Free download pdf