HTC 10 Review

HTC 10 Review

Coming to the touchscreen response, HTC has amped up the responsiveness of the HTC 10 by almost 50%, which means the touch on the HTC 10 is smoother than butter smooth.

Performance wise, the HTC 10 has absolutely nothing to worry about. The device comes loaded with the Snapdragon 820 chipset, an Adreno 530 GPU, and 4GB of RAM.

The Snapdragon has been given its fair share of benchmark tests, and the common conclusion is that no matter what resolution you throw at it ( 1080p or even 1440p ), the Snapdragon 820 will not break a sweat.

 

CAMERA – 

When HTC first introduced the Ultrapixel concept with the HTC One, People ridiculed it , and there was a world wide petition for HTC to switch back to conventional camera sensors. The end result was HTC giving in to the pressure and introducing the conventional sensors in their future devices. Now however, it looks like HTC has regained its flair, which is why they have reintroduced the Ultrapbixel camera, but this time, better than ever before. The Camera is a 12 MP unit, but the pixels now measure 1.55 um , which is bigger than those on the Galaxy S7 and same as the ones on the Nexus 6P. What gives the HTC 10 the upper hand is a brighter aperture and OIS.

The Selfie snapper is a 5 MP unit, with nigger pixels here as well. Though this sounds tempting, the overall quality appears to be a bit ordinary, and not exactly the flagship grade as well. Video recording again is a flagship affair. You can record videos at 4K quality at 30 fps, 1080p at 60 fps and 720 p at 120 fps as well.