The iPhone XR starts off with Geekbench 4 results almost identical to the iPhone XS and XS Max. There’s no one synthetic benchmark that is perfectly comparable across platforms, but Geekbench 4 comes about as close as you can get. Geekbench is a mainstay of performance benchmarking in part because it is available for so many platforms: macOS, Windows, Linux, iOS, and Android. Let’s see how the iPhone XR shakes out against the XS and XS Max, last year’s iPhone X, and the iPhone 7 Plus from two years back. In other words, if you only cared about benchmarks, the cheapest new iPhone of 2018 would be the one to get. And because it’s a big phone with a big (for Apple) battery, and a much lower-resolution 1792×828 pixel LCD display, it should deliver battery life that outpaces every other iPhone on the market. Now that the iPhone XR is available, with the same A12 Bionic processor running at the same speeds, we expect it to deliver similar performance in a package that costs $250 less. Apple’s A12 Bionic just crushes every other phone processor. When we took a look at the iPhone XS and XS Max performance in September, we confirmed what we expected: They are not only the fastest iPhones ever made, but the fastest phones, period.
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