Cellphone Reviews

Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra review

A year later, the Note that isn’t returns. The Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra brings predictably minor upgrades – camera tweaks here and new chipset there, mostly – but how much can you really improve on the S22 Ultra in just a year? We’ll attempt to answer that question and see if the new Ultra can spark excitement in ways the specsheet couldn’t.

And it’s an expansive specsheet, of course. At the Ultra’s heart is the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2, and it’s one specifically made for the Galaxies – with higher clock rates than competitors get. The latest Qualcomm top-end chip also comes with efficiency promises, and we would never say no to some extra endurance.

The camera sees the introduction of a new 200MP sensor, up from the 108MP resolution of Ultras past. The couple of telephotos remain a staple of the lineup and a standout feature in the market where 10x optical zoom is nowhere to be found outside of the Samsung offerings. The 2023 Ultra is still the only model in the lineup with an autofocusing ultrawide – more of an ongoing rant we just had to include here about the lack of it on the lesser S23s than an actual noteworthy feature of the ultimate Galaxy.
The otherwise lengthy list of numbers and features below doesn’t really bring major changes from the previous generation. Battery capacity remains the same as does the charging rating; the ultrasonic fingerprint reader hasn’t gotten optical all of a sudden, proprietary features like DeX and Samsung Pay are still here, and you can count on the display being the best in the business. A small victory is the 256GB base storage – last year’s model started at an unreasonably low 128GB – so yay?

S23 Ultra review

Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra specs at a glance:
Body: 163.4×78.1×8.9mm, 234g; Glass front (Gorilla Glass Victus 2), glass back (Gorilla Glass Victus 2), aluminum frame; IP68 dust/water resistant (up to 1.5m for 30 mins).
Display: 6.80″ Dynamic AMOLED 2X, 120Hz, HDR10+, 1750 nits (peak), 1440x3088px resolution, 19.3:9 aspect ratio, 501ppi; Always-on display.
Chipset: Qualcomm SM8550-AC Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4 nm): Octa-core (1×3.36 GHz Cortex-X3 & 2×2.8 GHz Cortex-A715 & 2×2.8 GHz Cortex-A710 & 3×2.0 GHz Cortex-A510); Adreno 740.
Memory: 256GB 8GB RAM, 256GB 12GB RAM, 512GB 12GB RAM, 1TB 12GB RAM; UFS 4.0.
OS/Software: Android 13, One UI 5.1.
Rear camera: Wide (main): 200 MP, f/1.7, 24mm, 1/1.3″, 0.6µm, multi-directional PDAF, Laser AF, OIS; Telephoto: 10 MP, f/2.4, 70mm, 1/3.52″, 1.12µm, Dual Pixel PDAF, OIS, 3x optical zoom; Telephoto: 10 MP, f/4.9, 230mm, 1/3.52″, 1.12µm, Dual Pixel PDAF, OIS, 10x optical zoom; Ultra wide angle: 12 MP, f/2.2, 13mm, 120˚, 1/2.55″, 1.4µm, Dual Pixel PDAF, Super Steady video.
Front camera: 12 MP, f/2.2, 26mm (wide), Dual Pixel PDAF.
Video capture: Rear camera: 8K@24/30fps, 4K@30/60fps, 1080p@30/60/240fps, 720p@960fps, HDR10+, stereo sound rec., gyro-EIS; Front camera: 4K@30/60fps, 1080p@30fps.
Battery: 5000mAh; 45W wired, PD3.0, 65% in 30 min (advertised), Wireless (Qi/PMA), 4.5W reverse wireless.
Misc: Fingerprint reader (under display, ultrasonic); Stylus (Bluetooth integration, accelerometer, gyro); NFC; stereo speakers; Samsung DeX, Samsung Wireless DeX, Bixby natural language commands and dictation, Samsung Pay (Visa, MasterCard certified), Ultra Wideband (UWB) support.
We did call the S23 Ultra a Note from the get-go, and the S Pen is indeed here to stay – despite habitual pessimists around the office writing if off after the beloved Note moniker disappeared with the S22 Ultra. Sure, you can have an S Pen (a different one) for your Fold, but no S Pen case beats the convenience of an in-body stylus like the one you get here.

Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra unboxing
You don’t get a lot else, though. The Ultra shows up in what has become the norm for Samsung high-end phone packages – a thin as possible black cardboard box with a likeness of the handset printed on the lid in a corresponding color to the actual unit inside.
The size of the box guarantees there’s no charger inside, but there’s still a USB-C cable – despite our continued droning how ‘this time may be the last time you’re getting a cable’, Samsung actually persists in including one – does that count as winning? There’s also a SIM eject pin, which we normally wouldn’t mention, but the unboxing section could use the extra words.

Design, build quality, handling
For all the talk about how the Galaxy S23 Ultra isn’t all that different from the outgoing model, it’s in the design that you can, in fact, notice some tangible and visible changes. It’s not a night and day type of differences and you won’t be mistaking the S23 Ultra for any other maker’s product, nor is it a dramatic departure from the whole Note aesthetic, but there are subtle developments here and there.
Perhaps the most significant of those is the further flattening of the display. The pioneer in curved panels from before the whole foldable movement, Samsung’s been continually shifting away from the curved edges in the past few years. So much so that in the last two generations, it’s been only the Ultra that had any sort of bend to its screen, and the 2023 model all but does away with it completely.

That tweak will be met with applause by flat-screen lovers who insist that curved edges are detrimental to handling. We must admit that this latest refinement does indeed manage to deliver both the more secure grip of flat-panel phones and the premium impression that gentle curves give your fingertipA similarly painless and trouble-free experience can be reported on the fingerprint reader, which is fast and reliable. Plus, it does its magic without blasting 1000nits of brightness at you in the middle of the night since it’s ultrasonic as opposed to optical. That said, there are users who’ve been reporting less than stellar experience with even the latest Samsung ultrasonic sensor implementations, so maybe there’s a bit of that ‘your mileage may vary’ at play. In our office, fans vastly outnumber naysayers, so let’s go with that.
s when swiping in from the sides.
The frame is made of what Samsung calls Armor Aluminum – a specific alloy they came up with that is tougher than your garden variety aluminum. Meanwhile, both the front and rear panels are courtesy of Corning – it’s their latest Gorilla Glass Victus 2, which should be even better than the Victus+ of yesteryear, especially in the event of a drop on concrete.

Naturally, the phone is IP68-rated for dust and water resistance, though Samsung doesn’t go above and beyond (below? and beyond) the standard’s 1.5m depth for 30 mins requirement like Apple does with the iPhones (rated at 6m submersion for 30 mins).
On the nicely flat top plate of the S23 Ultra there’s just a tiny mic pinhole.

In contrast, a whole bunch of things are on the equally flat bottom, including the USB-C port, the main loudspeaker, a couple of mics and the SIM card slot (which takes one or two nano SIMs, no microSD).

Also here is the silo for the S Pen that got relocated to the left side of the handset for the last ‘true’ Note, the Note20 Ultra in 2020, and the placement got carried over for the non-Note S-series Ultras. It remains a little odd all those year later, but is perhaps a godsend if you’re a leftie.
Same superb display as last year
The Galaxy S23 Ultra has the same display as last year’s model, going by the specs and promised numbers. Theoretically, it’s likely a different SKU, if for no other reason than the changed edge curvature. But don’t take the lack of change as something bad, because the S22 Ultra’s display was already superb.

Source: gsmarena