DisplayMate Now Considers Galaxy Note9 Screen as Best in Market

THE Samsung there may be its flaws (and who hasn't anyway?), but if there is a field in which we can all agree that South Korean razes the screens. Suffice it to see that the last two panels proudly displaying the title of “best screen on a smartphone” by the specialist firm Displaymate were from the company: the Galaxy S9 and, before him, the iPhone X, which, yes, manufactured by Samsung. Now the paradigm continues.

Samsung Galaxy Note9

According to DisplayMate, the Galaxy Note9 brings the best screen ever placed on a smartphone, with significantly higher color, brightness and viewing angle than the competition. The 6.4-inch Super AMOLED panel was praised by experts especially because of its brightness: it is approximately 27% brighter than that found on Note8, with a peak of 710 nits, and has 32% more contrast at maximum brightness (if auto brightness option is on).

Another point highly praised by DisplayMate experts was the need for color, an aspect that in the distant past has been controversial on AMOLED displays. According to the firm, the panel is “virtually indistinguishable from perfect,” as well as having the smallest color change rate of a device on the market. Other records were hit by the screen, such as higher contrast ratio, lower screen reflectance, lower white-angle variation, and more.

Giving Note9's screen the maximum rating “A +”, DisplayMate ranks:

The Galaxy Note9 has the most innovative and high performance smartphone screen that our lab has ever tested, breaking and setting many new performance records like the ones listed above. He performs his tasks evenly consistently and has received green ratings (very good to excellent) in all DisplayMate Test categories and in the Medium Categories only the second screen to receive green scores in all categories, after which he equips Galaxy. S9 The level of performance and excellence of the panels has been growing year by year, and now the Galaxy Note9 has risen the standard to a significantly higher level.

Does Apple have something to say about it next month?

via Android Central