The Samsung Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 is powered by either an Exynos 5420 or a Snapdragon 800, depending on whether you get the Wi-Fi only or the LTE model. Both pack 3GB of RAM but differ on everything else as far as the chipset is concerned.
That said, Samsung did a very good job of balancing the Galaxy S4 with Snapdragon 600 and Exynos 5410 to give them equal performance. We have the Exynos-powered Note Pro 12.2 with four Cortex-A15 cores at 1.9GHz and another four Cortex-A7 cores at 1.3GHz processor. The GPU is a new Mali T628MP6.
The Snapdragon 800 model has four Krait 400 cores at 2.3 and Adreno 330, its performance should be quite familiar by now (it powers most of the recent flagship devices, including the Galaxy Note 3 phablet).
It terms of CPU power, it seems that the four Cortex-A15 cores lag behind the Krait 400 alternative. The difference is slim, but the Exynos-powered Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 was behind the Note 3 phablet, its results consistent with the Galaxy Note 10.1 (2014) powered by the same Exynos chipset.
Benchmark Pi
Lower is better
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 99
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 111
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 115
LG G Pad 8.3 131
Transformer Pad TF701T 137
LG Optimus G Pro 147
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 211
Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 324
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 351
Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus 470
Samsung Galaxy 3 7.0 483
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 Plus 488
Geekbench 3
Higher is better
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 2937
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 2743
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 2706
Transformer Pad TF701T 2665
LG G Pad 8.3 1950
HTC One Max 1899
HTC Butterfly 1257
We also ran the AnTuTu 4 full system benchmark where the Note Pro 12.2 came out on top, slightly ahead of the other Cortex-A15 tablets (including the Transformer Pad TF701T, which has a Tegra 4 chipset).
AnTuTu 4
Higher is better
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 34393
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 33198
Transformer Pad TF701T 32991
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 31109
Samsung Galaxy S4 24716
LG G Pad 8.3 24440
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 24236
Sony Xperia Tablet Z 20216
LG Optimus G Pro 20056
HTC Butterfly 19513
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 19131
Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0 17159
Google Nexus 10 12695
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 9070
Basemark X
Higher is better
LG Nexus 5 985
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 961
Sony Xperia Z1 Compact 931
LG G2 879
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 764
How much did the GPU help for that result? Not much as it turns out. The Mali T628MP6 GPU has tangibly less performance in the GFXBench 1080p off-screen tests. Performance is nothing special on the older 2.7 T-Rex bench, but nearly double on the newer 3.0 Manhattan tests.
GFXBench 2.7 T-Rex (1080p off-screen)
Higher is better
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 26
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 22.7
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 22
Transformer Pad TF701T 21
Samsung Galaxy S4 17.1
Apple iPad 4 16.8
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 15
LG G Pad 8.3 15
Google Nexus 10 13.9
Sony Xperia Z 13.5
Sony Xperia Tablet Z 13
Sony Xperia ZL 12.8
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 7.0
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 4.0
GFXBench 3.0 Manhattan (1080p off-screen)
Higher is better
Samsung Galaxy Note 3 9.7
Sony Xperia Z1 Compact 9
LG Nexus 5 8.5
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 5.6
Those were off-screen tests and the 2,560 x 1,600 resolution of the Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 screen takes quite a toll. The tablet managed a playable (but barely) framerate in Epic Citadel Ultra quality, which uses the popular Unreal Engine. Keep in mind that dropping to High Quality pushes the framerate to nearly 60fps.
Epic Citadel (Ultra quality)
Higher is better
Sony Xperia Z1 54.9
Sony Xperia Z Ultra 54.9
LG G2 51
Samsung Galaxy S4 (S600) 37.2
HTC One 35.6
HTC Butterfly 29.6
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 28.3
Samsung has done very well when it comes to browser optimizations (note: we used the modified Android browser, but Chrome is also available). The Note Pro 12.2 topped the chart in the latest SunSpider and BrowserMark 2.
SunSpider
Lower is better
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 531
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 569
Transformer Pad TF701T 606
LG Optimus G Pro 1011
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 1150
LG G Pad 8.3 1190
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 1233
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 1366
Google Nexus 7 1703
new Apple iPad 1722
Samsung Galaxy Note 10.1 1891
Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.7 1953
Samsung Galaxy Tab 7.0 Plus 1992
Galaxy Tab 2 7.0 2253
Huawei MediaPad 2490
BrowserMark 2
Higher is better
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 3317
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 3138
Transformer Pad TF701T 3005
LG G Pad 8.3 2664
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 2386
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 2363
HTC One 2262
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 2228
Sony Xperia Tablet Z 2170
LG Optimus G Pro 1801
Oppo Find 5 1797
Google Nexus 10 1773
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 7.0 1612
HTC Butterfly 1475
The Vellamo score is not as high as it could have been though, the Note 10.1 (2014) has basically the same chipset and screen resolution and is on top.
Vellamo
Higher is better
Galaxy Note 10.1 2014 Edition 2743
Transformer Pad TF701T 3089
LG G Pad 8.3 2505
Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 (Exynos) 2463
Samsung Galaxy Note II 2418
HTC One 2382
Sony Xperia Tablet Z 2265
Samsung Galaxy S4 2060
Google Nexus 10 1929
HTC Butterfly 1866
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 10.1 1777
Samsung Galaxy S III 1641
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 8.0 1633
Asus Nexus 7 (2013) 1597
Samsung Galaxy Tab 3 7.0 1440
The Samsung Galaxy Note Pro 12.2 offers flagship performance but users have a decision to make - the Exynos-powered version is marginally slower than the Snapdragon one, mainly felt in the graphics department. But the Snapdragon model comes with LTE Cat. 4 support and commands a higher price respectively.
Is it worth getting the LTE model even though you won't use mobile data? No, the difference isn't worth the price jump. However, the extra speed is a bonus for those who do need LTE.
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