In less than an hour, Samsung Unpacked 2018 will begin in New York. At the event, Samsung will unveil their latest flagship Galaxy Note smartphone, the Galaxy Note 9. Nearly every detail about the device has been leaked already. We’ll be covering the announcements from the event in detail, but there’s one upcoming announcement we’ve been covering extensively because of its relevancy to Android, the Galaxy Note 9, and mobile gaming: Fortnite Mobile on Android. Yesterday, we showed you gameplay footage of Fortnite Mobile running on the Samsung Galaxy S9+. The game is expected to be exclusive to the Samsung Galaxy Note 9 for 30 days followed by a possible general Samsung Galaxy exclusivity period of up to an additional 3 months, according to AndroidHeadlines. By popular demand, we’re recording gameplay footage of the mobile game running on non-Samsung devices. Here’s Fortnite Mobile on Android running on the OnePlus 6 and the Razer Phone.
For a brief reminder, here are the basic hardware specifications of each device that we tested the game on:
- OnePlus 6
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 system-on-chip with Adreno 630 GPU
- 1080 x 2280 resolution
- 8GB RAM
- 128GB of UFS 2.1 storage
- Android 8.1 Oreo with OxygenOS
- Razer Phone
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 system-on-chip with Adreno 540 GPU
- 1080 x 1920 resolution (with variable refresh rate up to 120Hz)
- 8GB RAM
- 128GB of UFS 2.1 storage
- Android 8.1 Oreo
Given the hardware discrepancy, it isn’t fair for us to do a direct performance comparison between the two. (We’re not discounting the software optimizations each device brings to the table which may even the playing field, but we don’t know exactly what tools each company employs in their software to optimize for gaming.) That’s not the purpose of these videos, anyways. These videos are simply to show you how an early build of Fortnite Mobile currently plays on the OnePlus 6 and Razer Phone. If we decide to do detailed performance testing, we’ll follow-up with graphs showing frame statistics comparing multiple devices with as many variables controlled as possible. (Fortnite’s restrictions on ADB access make using traditional benchmarking tools like Gamebench a tad difficult, though we’re working on a bypass.)
So without further ado, here are the gameplay videos showing off how this build of Fortnite runs currently on the OnePlus 6 and Razer Phone. In general, both devices run the game at the “Epic” graphics setting with a stable 30FPS thanks to support for the Vulkan Graphics API, although the Razer Phone does have dropped frames during explosions and suffers from audio skipping. We’re sure these issues will be resolved before the game’s general availability in ~1-4 months, though.
Fortnite Mobile on the OnePlus 6
Fortnite Mobile on the Razer Phone
from xda-developers https://ift.tt/2MxgMUl
via IFTTT
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire