![]() ![]() When users run benchmark apps, which I agree aren’t a useful proxy for real life performance, we believe that they want to see the full potential of their device without interference from tampering. We are not changing the performance of our chipset, for instance by overclocking it. We are not making it easier for the chipset to perform, for instance by changing to a lower resolution when detecting a benchmark app. We also fully activate our chipset in other parts of OxygenOS, for instance when launching apps to make the launch experience faster and smoother. “We have made it so that when running benchmark apps, the phone performs the same as when running resource intensive apps such as 3D games. In Pei’s opinion, the OnePlus 5 is doing nothing to cheat the system, with the phone always operating at full capacity when running resource intensive apps. OnePlus co-founder Carl Pei has responded to the controversy in a Reddit post, explaining that the OnePlus 5 treats benchmarking apps in the same way it would resource-intensive games. When Anandtech ran a browser-based benchmark called Speedometer 2.0 on the OnePlus 9 Pro, it managed a score of 61.5, which is lower compared to flagships featuring the same Snapdragon 888. All little cores are affected and kept at 1.9GHz, and it is through this cheat that OnePlus achieves some of the highest GeekBench 4 scores of a Snapdragon 835 to date.” “While there are no governor switches when a user enters a benchmark (at least, we can’t seem to see that’s the case), the minimum frequency of the little cluster jumps to the maximum frequency as seen under performance governors. XDA Developers wrote the following on the subject: This time around, however, the cheating has been described by many as more blatant, resulting in some of the highest GeekBench 4 Snapdragon 835 scores yet, with the OnePlus 5 hitting a benchmark score of 6,700. ![]() It points out OnePlus 5 manages to achieve high Geekbench 4 scores for Snapdragon 835 by keeping all little cores clocked at 1.9 GHz. According to a report in XDA developers, the cheating mechanism is blatant and aimed at maximising performance. L1510139518383, Nov 8, 2017: I'm tested my 1+3 in different situation and have one verdict : phone know when you start benchmark and give you all perfomance what he can whenever overheating and this cheating is abnormal for example we have battery test in geekbench and phone gonna overheat 90c and above but in stress test from playmarket temperature stops around 70c it's normal and we can see. In terms of the OnePlus 3T, the company reportedly targeted benchmark apps, boosting CPU performance whenever a benchmarking app was running. OnePlus has denied the charge, and said they are not overclocking the cores. Now that the OnePlus 5 has officially been unveiled and tech reviewers are putting the device to the test, XDA claims that OnePlus has used the same tactic with its latest flagship device in a reported effort to manipulate benchmark scores once again. When the OnePlus 3T was released last year, XDA Developers uncovered that the smartphone was cheating benchmarks by activating a new ‘performance’ mode designed to result in more favourable GeekBench scores. ![]()
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