HTC One Benchmarks

HTC One Benchmarks: It destroys everything else available in the market today


We’ve been lucky enough to get our hand on the newly announced HTC One and so we decided to run a few benchmark tests on the device and see, how well it performs and what do the numbers say. The HTC One is powered by the all-new Qulacomm Snapdragon 600 processor clocking at 1.7GHz under the hood and the Benchmark results show that the new chip blows away everything else available in the market at present.

Starting off our benchmark test with Quadrant Standard, the HTC One scored more than double of what the ‘previous-generation’ smartphones scored. The new HTC One scored 11972 points, and was miles ahead from the likes of HTC One X and the Asus transformer Prime TF201 which is powered by the Nividia Tegra 3 processor. The new Snapdragon 600 processor beats the previous-gen Snapdragon S4 Pro processor by a big margin. Also, no previous generation device has got even close to this score in Quadrant Standard, even after the all the rooting, over-clocking and custom-ROMs.

The HTC One tops NenaMark2 scores as well, as it scores 61 fps ( frames per second) and might have even got ahead of that score, but it seems that NenaMark2 shows a maximum score of about 61 fps.

Moving over to AnTuTu benchmarks, the HTC One again destroys it’s competition as it gets a score of 25064 along with a five-star rating. By now, we had no doubt that the HTC One would surely be a force to reckon with and the upcoming Samsung Galaxy S4 will face a tough fight from HTC this time around.

Finally, we tried out GLBenchmark on the device and the results of each performance test was quite impressive to say the least. Clearly, there is no real competition in the market at present for the HTC One, and the only time when HTC should really be concerned about the competition, is when Samsung launches it’s next flagship smartphone, the Galaxy S4.

After trying out the HTC One, one feels that the software on the device leaves a bit to be desired as the hardware seems to be more advanced than the software at present but we hope that by the time Android Key Lime Pie rolls-out, it’ll be good enough to utilize the hardware on the HTC One to it’s full potential.

Report by : Abhinav Bhargava

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