The curved sides of the display do reflect the light differently though so sometimes there are brighter reflections there. In bright light conditions, both displays can go quite high in overdrive mode - however it's only available in Auto brightness mode. The Gorilla Glass 4 is laminated to the AMOLED display below it so there's very little reflection.Īs it happens, screen brightness on the Galaxy S6 Edge is slightly lower than on the Galaxy S6. Sunlight legibility is better than ever, a slight improvement over the Note 4 and a decent jump from the Galaxy S5. Viewing angles are not an issue either, it would have been very visible in the curved sections of the display otherwise. That's one traditional strength of LCDs gone and Samsung has nailed the color accuracy too. That's brighter than many LCDs out there! Brightness got a healthy bump - you can get it to around 470nits manually, but if you leave it at auto, the phone can boost its display to an impressive 750nits. Samsung continued to improve other characteristics of Super AMOLED displays too. Super AMOLED displays haven't had issues with perceivable sharpness ever since they reached the 1080p threshold, but with the extra pixels, the display feels even sharper. Some view the move to QHD resolution (1,440 x 2,560px) as unnecessary and while part of the motivation is marketing, the other part is that you can visually discern the difference. Still, the curve on the side is fairly minor and the left and right edges of the screen remain usable. The Super AMOLED screen remains at 5.1" though it's not a straight line diagonal.
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