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There's no denying that the Galaxy S20 Ultra is something bold. Something special. It exists to show off its camera features. There's the 108-megapixel sensor, capturing scenes for detailed crop-ins that invariably make you say "wow!" Then there's the 100x zoom lens that reveals lettering, faces and architectural details you can't see from afar with the naked eye. And the beautiful 40-megapixel selfie camera that won't spare your feelings when you turn off beauty mode.
8.0
Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G
$1,400 at Walmart
$1,400 at Best Buy
CNET may get a commission from these offers.
How it stacks up
Motorola Moto G7 8.0 $299 Apple iPhone 11 9.0 $699 Samsung Galaxy S10E 8.9 $450
Like
Boundary-pushing cameras
Bright, sharp, colorful photos
Strong battery life on default settings
Don't Like
Feels thick and heavy
Protruding camera bump
Uneven battery performance
Overpriced for nonessential features
The most advanced (and expensive) new flagship undeniably pushes boundaries. Samsung wants you to see these photos and crave this phone. Facing the iPhone 11 Pro, Pixel 4 and Huawei Mate 30, the world's largest phone-maker is playing to win. Does it succeed? Yes… and also no.
On paper, the S20 Ultra is unbeatable. It has that insanely colorful 6.9-inch edge-to-edge display. An enormous 5,000-mAh battery. Plus all the waterproofing, fast charging and reverse wireless charging you'd expect from a top-tier Samsung phone.
But in my real-world tests, the Ultra doesn't play like the all-around superstar I want it to be, especially for $1,400 (£1,199, AU$1,999). Its photography is mostly superb, but unignorable hardware and software drawbacks dampen my enthusiasm for the device as a whole.
Angela Lang/CNET
I never got over my distaste for its thick, heavy design. And I can't ignore its uneven battery performance, especially when the superfast screen refresh option -- which makes scrolling, animations and some content liquid-smooth -- appears to slash battery reserves.
Despite the S20 Ultra's camera prowess, I find myself reaching for the more refined Galaxy Note 10 Plus and more interesting Galaxy Z Flip foldable phone. For me, the Ultra is simply less fun to use.
Here's another conundrum. Without being able to fully test the S20 Ultra side-by-side with the cheaper, smaller Galaxy S20 and S20 Plus, it's hard to say which one is the "best" overall. Samsung sent journalists the S20 Ultra for review first, leading with its priciest model. The three phones share core software and hardware, but they have different camera specs and battery reserves.
At the time of writing this review, the S20 and Plus are still days away from going on sale. I can't yet speak to how performance compares, but I can say that the S20 Ultra leaves the door open for the standard Galaxy S20 ($999) or S20 Plus ($1,199) to be the smarter buy for most.
In fact, I've declared the smallest Galaxy S20 as the best value of all three new phones. See our photo comparison with the Galaxy S20 Ultra and iPhone 11 Pro here. Read on for my Galaxy S20 Ultra highs and lows. If you're on the fence about buying samsung s7 edge update firmware's priciest model, my advice is this: wait. The best S20 for you may not be quite so Ultra.
There's no denying that the Galaxy S20 Ultra is something bold. Something special. It exists to show off its camera features. There's the 108-megapixel sensor, capturing scenes for detailed crop-ins that invariably make you say "wow!" Then there's the 100x zoom lens that reveals lettering, faces and architectural details you can't see from afar with the naked eye. And the beautiful 40-megapixel selfie camera that won't spare your feelings when you turn off beauty mode.
8.0
Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra 5G
$1,400 at Walmart
$1,400 at Best Buy
CNET may get a commission from these offers.
How it stacks up
Motorola Moto G7 8.0 $299 Apple iPhone 11 9.0 $699 Samsung Galaxy S10E 8.9 $450
Like
Boundary-pushing cameras
Bright, sharp, colorful photos
Strong battery life on default settings
Don't Like
Feels thick and heavy
Protruding camera bump
Uneven battery performance
Overpriced for nonessential features
The most advanced (and expensive) new flagship undeniably pushes boundaries. Samsung wants you to see these photos and crave this phone. Facing the iPhone 11 Pro, Pixel 4 and Huawei Mate 30, the world's largest phone-maker is playing to win. Does it succeed? Yes… and also no.
On paper, the S20 Ultra is unbeatable. It has that insanely colorful 6.9-inch edge-to-edge display. An enormous 5,000-mAh battery. Plus all the waterproofing, fast charging and reverse wireless charging you'd expect from a top-tier Samsung phone.
But in my real-world tests, the Ultra doesn't play like the all-around superstar I want it to be, especially for $1,400 (£1,199, AU$1,999). Its photography is mostly superb, but unignorable hardware and software drawbacks dampen my enthusiasm for the device as a whole.
Angela Lang/CNET
I never got over my distaste for its thick, heavy design. And I can't ignore its uneven battery performance, especially when the superfast screen refresh option -- which makes scrolling, animations and some content liquid-smooth -- appears to slash battery reserves.
Despite the S20 Ultra's camera prowess, I find myself reaching for the more refined Galaxy Note 10 Plus and more interesting Galaxy Z Flip foldable phone. For me, the Ultra is simply less fun to use.
Here's another conundrum. Without being able to fully test the S20 Ultra side-by-side with the cheaper, smaller Galaxy S20 and S20 Plus, it's hard to say which one is the "best" overall. Samsung sent journalists the S20 Ultra for review first, leading with its priciest model. The three phones share core software and hardware, but they have different camera specs and battery reserves.
At the time of writing this review, the S20 and Plus are still days away from going on sale. I can't yet speak to how performance compares, but I can say that the S20 Ultra leaves the door open for the standard Galaxy S20 ($999) or S20 Plus ($1,199) to be the smarter buy for most.
In fact, I've declared the smallest Galaxy S20 as the best value of all three new phones. See our photo comparison with the Galaxy S20 Ultra and iPhone 11 Pro here. Read on for my Galaxy S20 Ultra highs and lows. If you're on the fence about buying samsung s7 edge update firmware's priciest model, my advice is this: wait. The best S20 for you may not be quite so Ultra.