Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus In Nepal
The Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus is unquestionably good, but it isn’t exactly a beauty. It’s slim and elegant, with a thickness of 7.8mm, a height of 162mm, a width of just 74mm, and a weight of only 186g. Coming from an iPhone 11 Pro Max, the S20 Plus feels notably taller, but lighter and slimmer – which is quite an accomplishment considering the S20 Plus display is 0.2in larger.
Design and main features
The layout of components and buttons, on the other hand, is unremarkable, but the black model seems a little dull to look at. It’s only available in these colors, “cloud blue,” and “cosmic grey,” with no additional options. While both the rear and front glass are protected by Gorilla Glass 6, the rear glass appears to be more susceptible to fingerprints and grease.
The most noticeable change is that the Bixby button is no longer located on the phone’s left side, unused, and is instead activated by a long press of the power button. The volume rocker and power button are on the right edge, the dual-purpose SIM and microSD card tray is on the top edge, the USB-C port and speaker grille are on the bottom, and the selfie camera is visible through a neat hole-punch cutout in the center of the display, similar to the Galaxy Note 10 Plus. However, you won’t find an S-Pen stylus here.
Aside from that, the phone has a slew of high-end features, but nothing you wouldn’t expect from one of the 2020s most anticipated smartphones. IP68 dust and water resistance allow for up to 30 minutes of submersion in 1.5 meters of water. Quick access is possible thanks to an under-screen fingerprint scanner and face unlocking, which eliminates the need to enter a passcode. The phone’s wireless chipset supports 4G and 5G connections, as well as WiFi 6, the latest version of super-fast Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth 5. Wireless charging and reverse wireless charging are also available. This phone has pretty much everything.
Display
The screen is the biggest difference between the S20 Plus and its almost identical brother, the Galaxy S20. It measures 6.7 inches across the diagonal, which is 0.5 inches larger than most smartphone screens. Aside from that, the screens are identical in terms of specifications.
Both employ AMOLED displays, which ensure ideal black levels and contrast, and both support HDR10+, which claims to cover the DCI-P3 color gamut 100 percent. Both have that ultra-smooth 120Hz panel as well.
If you’re on the fence regarding high-refresh-rate displays in phones, I’d recommend giving one a try in person if you can, because it makes a huge difference in how a phone feels to use. Menus, web pages, maps, and everything else that pans or scrolls flies around like cold butter in a hot Teflon skillet
Cameras on the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus
The Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus has three image cameras on the back: a zoom, a regular wide-angle, and an ultra-wide-angle. The zoom camera is an f/1.8 64-megapixel 3x optical device that can digitally zoom to 30x, rather than the S20 Ultra’s astounding 100x “Space Zoom” (10x optical). The main camera, which is a lot more standard-looking 12-megapixel f/1.8 shooter, will be used most of the time, while the super wide-angle camera records at 12-megapixels and has an aperture of f/2.2.
A 0.3-megapixel “time of flight” module sits just below the LED flash and is used mostly for analyzing depth in an image so you may apply background blur more precisely when editing.
The same tale may be told about video recording. The Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus, like the Ultra, can record in 8K resolution at 30 frames per second, which looks amazing with a tripod or gimbal (stabilization isn’t available at this resolution). However, you’ll only be able to see this film if you have an 8K TV.
The processor of the Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus
The Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus is loaded with the latest technology, as you’d expect from a flagship upgrade. The phone will be available in the UK and Europe with Samsung’s 7nm 2.7GHz octa-core Exynos 990 processor, while the Snapdragon 865 will be available in the US.
As a result, performance is quite quick, and the S20 Plus performed admirably in the benchmarks. It’s not quite as quick as the iPhone 11 Pro’s Apple A13 SoC, but it’s fast enough to provide speedy responsiveness in every situation.
One of the advantages of the 120Hz display is that in games that support it, the onscreen framerate can reach far higher than the standard 60fps seen on phones with 60Hz displays. The S20 Plus achieved an average frame rate of 105fps in the onscreen Manhattan GFXBench test, which is among the highest we’ve ever seen in this test. (Note: despite selecting the 90Hz option in the display settings, we attempted to retest the OnePlus 7T Pro in this test, but it remained capped at 60fps.
 Samsung Galaxy S20 Plus Specifications
Names | Specification |
RAM | 12 GB |
Screen Size and Resolution | 1,440 x 3,200 and 6.7in |
Pixel Density | 525ppi |
Camera | 12MP (f/1.8), 64MP telephoto (f/2.0), 12MP ultra-wide (f/2.2), 0.2MP ToF (f/1) plus 10MP front |
Water and Dust Resistance | IP68 |
Wireless Charging | Yes |
USB Connection | USB Type-C |
Storage | 128GB, 256GB, 512GB, 1TB microSD (up to 1TB) |
WiFi Connection | 802.11ax |
Bluetooth | 5 |
NFC | Yes |
Data | 4G and 5G models |
SIM | Dual Sim(shared with microSD) |
Dimensions | 74 x 7.8 x 162mm |
Battery | 4,500mAh |