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Valve now offers certified refurbished Steam Deck devices
10:34 pm | August 9, 2023

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Valve has started selling certified refurbished versions of the Steam Deck console. The obvious advantage is that they are cheaper than buying new but with the same quality level, minus a few scuffs. The Steam Deck units go through a stringent testing process, which is the same as that for new units. Each device gets a factory reset, software update, and an extensive examination with over 100 tests. Valve claims the refurbished units meet or even exceed the performance standards of new retail units. They may, however, have minor cosmetic blemishes from their former...

Atlas Fallen review – a game built on sand
9:00 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Tags: | Comments: Off
Review Information

Platform reviewed: PS5
Available on: PS5, Xbox Series X|S, PC
Release date: August 10, 2023

The traversal in Atlas Fallen is one of the best in years. Skimming and gliding across its vast sandy landscapes with supreme elegance, ease, and smoothness is a mastery that’s a joy to control, while airborne dashes and double-jumps make crossing chasms and cliffs a breeze. However, while getting around is undoubtedly the highlight, the rest of the game fails to offer a similar high, with wooden characters, a disappointing narrative, and complicated combat letting it down.

Atlas Fallen is also a ‘Soulslite’. Souls-ish staples like respawning enemies, a rechargeable Estus flask-style healing idol, Bonfire-alikes to save or upgrade your gear, and challenging (but not brutal) encounters, will make it feel like a Soulslike, but in reality, it’s more than that. However, at its core, this is much more of an action-adventure game and when you look at all its parts holistically, certainly doesn’t feel like the genre it’s aping in play. It is, however, a fun entry into the RPG and open-world fantasy libraries despite its lack of polish in places. 

Sandscapes and sand surfing

Sand surfing character in Atlas Fallen

(Image credit: Deck13/Focus Entertainment)

Taking place in a fantasy world that’s unbelievably sandy, Atlas Fallen opens by going through some typical tutorial motions - a dream sequence teaching you basic combat and movement, and setting up the story in a nomad camp, complete with some character customization to make your avatar, in the middle of nowhere - before unleashing you into the world, and its best bits. However, like the wider story, the setup of the narrative is a well-trodden one: your character of lowly origins has a magical dream and finds a magical item to begin a kinship with a mysterious being and can begin to wield powers through the discovery of a powerful, but incomplete, gauntlet. 

That world is made up of four main maps or areas, each with a central hub or settlement, expansive landscapes to travel across - and plenty of sand to shoot across. Each area and environment is worthy of the exploration time you’ll need to find all of the open-world game in 2023 trappings, featuring collectibles like lore, treasure, puzzles, and secrets. The benefit of taking the time to investigate the landscape is that you’ll also immerse yourself in some beautiful landscape spots and enjoy some fine vistas - from old decrepit ruins, sand-eroded caves, and expansive dunes or woodland.

A landscape vista from Atlas Fallen

(Image credit: Deck13/Focus Entertainment)
Best bit

Nothing beats surfing, skimming, and gliding across the sands in Atlas Fallen; it’s fluid, fast, agile, and every moment is fun. Combined with some aero-acrobatics, and the traversal of the game’s world is some of the best I’ve experienced in years.

It’s easy to fall for the beautiful vistas and crumbling ruins that make up the world of Atlas Fallen, but what makes this world one of my favorites from the last few years is the way you move through it. The traversal in Atlas Fallen is awesome. Strapping on the magical gauntlet gives you several powers, borne of the sand, including the ability to surf it. This isn’t just a sprint replacement service - you can twist and turn at will, your character leaning down as if they were a snowboarder to help turn corners. It even sounds brilliant; scuffed sand makes an ear-pleasing noise as you blast toward your next quest, hunt, or enemy.

There are rare moments when the surfing felt a little imperfect when transitioning from sand to another surface, or vice versa, but overall, it’s far and away the best part of the game. Deck13 knows this too, with designed-in functions like auto-collection of resources helping to keep the surfing experience uninterrupted and smooth.

But it’s not a case of splurging the game’s best feature in one early hit - your full suite of traversal moves grows with the story, and you’ll be adding to your repertoire of movements quite deep into the game, thus gaining more opportunities to mix it up and keep your movement feeling fresh and smooth.

Not handmade, but sand-made

Atlas Fallen's main character leaping into attack against a big crab-like creature

(Image credit: Deck13/Focus Entertainment)

The way your sand-made weapons tear their way out of your gauntlet within milliseconds of a button press, comprised of the sand surrounding you, is remarkably cool and adds a level of seamless fluidity to each fight. As soon as you can think of going to town on an enemy you’re already wielding the weapons and smashing them on your foes.

There are three sand-borne weapons that you can equip a pair of - a balanced hammer, a spikey glove, a super-fast whip - and each has a bunch of moves that you can master and combine too, extending the attacks beyond the standard ‘heavy’ and ‘light’. Simple stuff, but it layers complexity by moving away from a traditional stamina bar and instead has you building up Momentum during fights. This is granted with each hit you make on your enemies and opens up several special moves at different thresholds - similar to that of stamina slots in Assassin’s Creed Odyssey and Valhalla. Striking enemies also recharges the healing idol encouraging some aggression in your combat so as to gain healing charges - though this can also lead to some agonizing moments when you’ll be one hit away from said heal, only to be hit by a rogue swinging claw at the last moment.

Enemies of a certain size canteen be strategically taken apart

Your sand-made arsenal is further enhanced by Essence Stones; these are your passive or active equippable abilities, buffs, and skills; these can take your combat to another level and offer the chance to really personalize, and experiment with, your preferred combat. Almost all are upgradeable with resources and you can build up an approach to battle with these alone: equip damage-focused skills like a sand tornado, give yourself a boost of momentum as each fight begins, create areas of energy that slow projectiles and enemies down, or concentrate on durability by going for extra defense and healing effects. At some point, though, you’ll likely have problems with your build, whichever way you commit to. But you’ll be well-catered to switch your character’s focus as there are plenty of Essence Stones available to use or upgrade. 

Changes in style will be a consideration once you factor in enemy variety and types, as things change from four-legged ground beasts and larger sandworms to massive crab- or bull-like creatures. Those enemies of a certain size canteen be strategically taken apart; body parts of the larger enemies will have their own amount of health that you’ll have to take down - something Deck13 introduced in its The Surge games. This can increase the amount of complexity in combat further - particularly if you have to maintain being airborne to attack a head or a flying creature. That said, the extra targets can make fights a little more nuanced as you can target particularly potent attacks or limbs first in an effort to nullify an enemy. However, it can be frustrating when after taking an enemy's head, the rest of its attacks can be delivered just as viciously and effectively.

The results of all these parts mean Atlas Fallen’s combat is fast, fluid, and frantic

You can also take evasive action: you’ve got a block that can freeze enemies when a parry is timed perfectly and the ability to dodge by rolling on the ground or jetting in the air. While having these is welcome, both can actually serve to complicate combat, especially when you’re frantically fighting multiple enemies; both have to recharge and you can be left without either if you miss time them slightly.

Combat stills from the game Atlas Fallen

(Image credit: Deck13/Focus Entertainment)

All in all, though, the results of all these parts mean Atlas Fallen’s combat is fast, fluid, and frantic. However, sometimes it’s a bit too frantic and thus has a tendency to be over complex. The combination of weapons two weapons, each with its own combinations, the constant eye on momentum build-up, the button-combos to heal or use skills attached to the idol, and the role of dodging and blocking means that some combat scenarios become dangerously close to button mashing. This cheapened the combat somewhat and meant that the combat can be simultaneously enjoyable but tiresome as you rely on a few effective methods; no matter how satisfying it was to build up to a shatter attack - freezing the enemy and delivering high-damage blows - it had a tendency to become a regular, uninspiring pattern.

Atlas Fallen’s take on the good vs evil tale is a well-trodden one. It’s a familiar story of a person of lowly origin, finding a magic item, becoming powerful, and channeling the spirit of one god to take on another. Bits of the story were even quite predictable early on, and the supposed crescendos when moving into new areas felt a little anticlimactic narratively, but the big gauntlet upgrades that tie closely to the story and punctuate the adventure - often with boss fights or multi-phase quests - did feel more significant and meaty; the narrative journey failing to mirror and match pace with the game’s mechanics’ journey.

Atlas Fallen, then, is a mixed bag - but also rather a ‘mid’ bag. Its traversal in the shape of the exquisite sand surfing and hangtime-tastic jumping and dashing will stay with me for a long time, but the story, characters, and parts of the combat are largely middling and shrug-worthy. This will ultimately stop it from shining in a year when we’re eating very well at the fantasy RPG adventure table. While there’s potential here, it feels like Atlas Fallen just isn’t quite the sum of its parts.

Accessibility

The accessibility menu screen from Atlas Fallen

(Image credit: Deck13/Focus Entertainment)

There are only a few dedicated accessibility functions and features in Atlas Fallen, with the majority of them geared toward language and subtitles. Outside of that, there is one option to turn on or off the camera shake. Overall, this is lean, and some more features - even the addition of subtitle size differences - would be most welcome. 

How we reviewed Atlas Fallen

I played Atlas Fallen on PS5. My playthrough took me about 12 hours to complete and included a host (but not all) of the side content. I played the game in both its performance and quality-focused modes and found the performance mode to be more suited to the game’s emphasis on fluidity and movement. I found there to be only very minor performance issues in the busiest city, and only for a few minutes only. I played the game on a Samsung 4K TV and used both a soundbar and headset for audio - deploying the latter when playing a couple of hours of co-op.

Atlas Fallen releases August 10, 2023, on PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC. See how it compares to our takes on the best PS5 games, the best Xbox Series X games, and the best PC games that you can play right now.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: it does more than everything
7:19 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Computers Gadgets | Comments: Off

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra: one-minute review

If you need a big tablet, you won’t find anything better than the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra, and that’s by design. Samsung has been polishing and refining its tablets and productivity software longer than any other tablet maker, even Apple. There are some limitations that keep this from being a total laptop replacement – those are mostly Android’s fault – and the accessories should be much more polished. Still, the tablet itself is almost perfect in every way, and if you can afford this big Ultra you’ll be happy every time you use it. 

Choosing a huge Android tablet is a commitment, especially if this is going to be your primary productivity tool. You can definitely make it work, and there are not many limitations that keep Android and all of its apps from replacing a Windows or Mac OS machine, and certainly a Chromebook. Still, you can also get a 15-inch Macbook Air (M2) for around the same price, and powerful as it is, the Tab S9 Ultra’s Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chip can’t compete with a desktop-class processor.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra with Ultra keyboard and trackpad showing TechRadar on screen

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

There are some areas where the Tab S9 Ultra can’t keep up with the hardware in its big Android competitor, the Lenovo Tab Extreme, but the software and features are so much easier to use that I would pick the Samsung over its rival any day. The comparable iPad Pro 12.9, meanwhile, is just a big powerful iPad, and Apple charges a hefty premium for a device that doesn’t give you quite as much as what Samsung offers; and I’m not just talking about the extra screen real estate. 

The Tab S9 Ultra gives you far more than any other tablet, Android or iPad, to get you working. You get the S Pen included, plus Samsung’s full DeX productivity environment, which makes Android look and feel more like a Chromebook when you connect the tablet to an external monitor and/or keyboard. I didn’t love Samsung’s optional keyboard accessory, but any keyboard and mouse will work with this tablet. 

Samsung has also been offering multi-window on Android longer than anyone, even Google, and it continually refines every bit of its software. It’s easier to snap, resize, and manipulate multiple windows and apps on the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra than it is on anything else short of a Windows computer. With the Tab S9 UItra, you’ll actually be getting stuff done, instead of just playing around on a big tablet. 

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: price and availability

  • $1,199.99 / £1,199 / AU$1,999 for the 256GB / 12GB model
  • Available with up to 1TB storage and 16GB RAM
  • No 5G option, only on the Tab S9 Plus

The Galaxy Tab S9 UItra is certainly expensive, but you get what you pay for – and when you break down the specs, compared to a smartphone like Samsung’s Galaxy S23 Ultra, the Tab S9 Ultra is actually a good deal

Is $1,200 / £1,200 / AU$2,000 too much to charge for any Android tablet? If you’re asking that question, you should probably check out a less expensive option, like the OnePlus Pad or the Google Pixel Tablet. Or, if you’ve got the cash but can’t imagine spending this much on a tablet, maybe check out the Macbook Air, which costs the same but doesn’t give you the touchscreen tablet experience in any way. 

With the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra you get a huge display that has a million more pixels than your sharpest phone screen. It’s sharper and higher-resolution than the 15-inch Macbook Air, plus it has not just touch functionality built in, but professional-strength Wacom-like drawing complete with pressure sensitivity and pen tilt detection.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

The Tab S9 Ultra thankfully comes with the S Pen (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

The S Pen is included, but the Ultra keyboard cover with trackpad is an extra $349.99 / £339 / AU$411.75, and while I’d recommend using a keyboard with the Tab S9 Ultra, I wouldn’t recommend Samsung’s offering. The back cover stand and S Pen holder that come with it are nice additions, but you can just buy that separately.

For a tablet this size, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra is actually a fair price. The Lenovo Tab Extreme is a bit less expensive, and its accessory keyboard is much nicer, but there have been some availability issues with the Lenovo, and you can’t buy it at the time of writing. If you spring for an iPad Pro 12.9, you’ll be paying more for a smaller display, and you don’t get a pen included. The iPad Pro is available with 5G, however, and that’s only shipping on the Tab S9 Plus, not the Ultra.

Sadly, unlike smartphones and wearables and accessories, we don’t often see good discounts on tablets, especially not high-end devices. The best deal you’ll find will likely involve trading in an old tablet or smartphone to Samsung; and without 5G on board, the carriers won’t be offering payment plans to help. 

  • Value score: 5 / 5

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: specs

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Put simply, the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra is a magnificent beast. It uses the fastest Qualcomm mobile chipset you can find right now, the same Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 'for Galaxy' SoC that’s in the Galaxy S23 Ultra and new Galaxy Z Fold 5. It’s slightly overclocked, just 5% faster on the biggest processing core, but in benchmark tests and real-world use, you won’t find a faster Android… well, anything, tablet or otherwise. 

While OnePlus and Lenovo use older MediaTek Dimensity 9000 processors, and Google is sticking with the same Tensor G2 chip in its latest Pixel Tablet, Samsung is smart to pack its most premium chip into the Tab S9 Ultra. Whether I was editing photos in Lightroom, or running multiple apps at once, there was never a stutter in performance. 

That said, Apple chips are still faster, whether that’s the mobile A15 Bionic on the base model iPad 10.9 or the desktop-class M1 and M2 chips found, respectively, in the iPad Air and iPad Pro models. The difference is that Apple’s iPadOS is built big and simple, like the iPhone, making it harder to multitask with many apps at once or create a workflow with the file system. Samsung’s tablet is built to fit a variety of needs. It can emulate a desktop, complete with windows and a taskbar, or keep things simple with a basic home screen and apps layout.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

I tested the Tab S9 Ultra with 12GB of RAM, and I never saw a slowdown even with multiple windows open. I imagine that if you edit humongous video files or highly detailed drawings you may benefit from more RAM, but most people won’t need it. 

My unit also came with 256GB of storage, but the Tab S9 Ultra has a microSD card slot, and that’s what I used to transfer photos from my Nikon D750 camera. All of the photos used in this review were edited directly on the tablet. 

You can find a slightly bigger battery and faster charging on the Lenovo Tab Extreme, but that tablet is also a bit bigger in every way, and a few grams heavier. The Tab S9 Ultra battery is big enough, it’s smart for Samsung to trim as much bezel and weight from this tablet as possible.

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: display

  • Excellent sharp and bright display
  • Enough room for multitasking plus more
  • Lack of Dolby Vision support stings when watching Netflix

If you’re a fan of big displays (and I am a big fan of big displays), you’ll love the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra. For folks like me who have owned 17-inch laptops and the biggest smartphones, you’ll appreciate the joy of having your field of view completely consumed by the brilliant pixels of the Tab S9 Ultra. 

The display is not quite as sharp as the iPad Pro 12.9’s in terms of pixel density, but that’s because it spreads those pixels over a much larger area (for a lower price, even). The biggest Galaxy Tab S9 gives you 15 inches more screen area on its 14.6-inch panel than the biggest iPad Pro.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

A big Galaxy S23 Ultra next to a much bigger Tab S9 Ultra (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Compared to its largest Android competitor, the Lenovo Tab Extreme, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra display looks better in most usage scenarios. Photos looked a bit more natural, and movies had a warmer and more cinematic look in the Ultra’s Vivid mode than you’ll see using the same settings on the Tab Extreme. 

The one area where the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra falls short, similar to all Samsung displays including its TV lineup, is the lack of support for Dolby Vision, Dolby’s HDR video standard. Samsung helped develop the competing HDR10+ technology; it has so far refused to license Dolby Vision on its devices, including the Tab S9 family. 

The reason that matters is because Netflix uses Dolby Vision; and Dolby Vision seems more widely used than HDR10+, quality comparisons aside. When you watch Netflix on the Tab S9 Ultra next to the Lenovo Tab Extreme, movies look much better on the Lenovo, which supports both Dolby Vision and HDR10+. The HDR support makes a big difference, especially with darker movies and shows like… oh, everything made in the last 20 years. 

That doesn’t mean Netflix looks bad on the Tab S9 Ultra; you won’t notice the difference if you’re not seeing the two displays side-by-side. But there’s a difference, and it’s a choice Samsung is making, not a technical limitation of the tablet.

  • Display score: 4 / 5

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: design

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
  • Slimmer bezels than an iPad Pro
  • S Pen attaches magnetically so it's easy to lose
  • Optional keyboard is flimsy

The Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra is all about that big, beautiful display, so the rest of the design just needs to get out of the way. When you’re starting with a huge, 14.6-inch rectangle, there’s not much you can do but try to cut down on the bezels, the thickness, and the weight. Samsung has done an admirable job of doing so, and its Tab S9 Ultra is a full millimeter thinner than the biggest iPad Pro 12.9. 

It’s also slimmer and lighter than the Lenovo Tab Extreme, an Android tablet with the same screen size. The Lenovo gives you a bigger battery, but once you have a cell as large as the 11,200mAh battery inside the Ultra, it’s more useful to shave off a bit of weight rather than add even more power.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

Wish there was a better way to store the Tab's S Pen (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Like the Galaxy S23 Ultra phone, the Tab S9 Ultra uses the S Pen, and it even gets the air gesture capabilities of the Bluetooth S Pen. Of course, that also means you need to charge the pen, and it charges while magnetically attached to the back of the tablet. There’s a nice groove that shows you where to stick it. 

I’d rather stow it inside the tablet, like I do on my Galaxy smartphone, but the S Pen that comes with the tab is a larger writing instrument than the little stick that comes with the phone. 

I hate that every single writing tablet uses magnets to hold the pen. It doesn’t work. It’s an easy way to lose the expensive pen, and I’m cynical enough to believe that this could be the point entirely.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

The Ultra keyboard with trackpad is not as premium as the tablet itself (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

If you are worried about losing your S Pen, you might want to buy the optional Samsung cover, which has a handy bubble on the back to keep the pen secure. Samsung sent me its Ultra deluxe keyboard cover with a trackpad, which is actually two separate parts: a magnetic back cover with a stand, and a separate keyboard that attaches to magnetic pins on the side of the tablet. You can buy just a back cover without the keyboard, which gives some extra protection (and weight), as well as that handy S Pen garage. 

  • Design score: 3/5

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: software

  • Mind-blowing software power from a mobile device
  • Can run a full desktop experience on a second display
  • Great multitasking, very intuitive gestures

There are plenty of expensive tablets that claim to help you be productive, but most of them make you work in order to understand how to use the tablet. On the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra, as on most Samsung tablets, multitasking and productivity couldn’t be easier. 

On other tablets, you can align two windows side by side, if you follow the instructions and tap in just the right spots. On the Tab S9 Ultra, multi-window features work just like they do on a Windows computer.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Snap a window to the side of the screen and it stays there, like it oughta. Draw the window to whatever quadrant you like, the Tab will keep up. You can shrink windows easily by dragging from the corner, and resizing and restoring multiple panes was never a hassle. 

Even Apple with macOS hasn’t figured out how to make multi-window tasks as easy as they are on the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra. And that’s just on the basic Android side of things. We haven’t even started up DeX… 

DeX is Samsung’s desktop experience, a separate desktop home screen that lives in the background, waiting for you to connect your tablet (or phone) to a second display. Connect the Tab S9 Ultra to a second screen and DeX springs into action, looking and behaving almost exactly like Chrome OS. That means you can arrange multiple windows, open multiple apps, and keep track of everything in a proper taskbar, just like on a desktop OS.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

While you’re doing that, the Tab S9 Ultra will still chug along happily as an Android tablet. You can use a keyboard and mouse with DeX, and have the big Ultra second screen running apps as well. It’s astoundingly powerful. Other tablets claim to be able to handle multi-monitor chores, but none work as easily or impressively as the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra. 

If you have other newer Galaxy devices, like the Galaxy Book 3 laptop, you can perform some very cool multi-screen trickery. Once I’d magnetically attached the Samsung Ultra keyboard cover and its trackpad to the Tab S9 Ultra, I moved the cursor to the right side of the screen and kept pushing. The Tab detected that I was trying to connect to my Galaxy S23 Ultra phone, and made the connection. A moment later, the cursor was moving around on my phone screen as an extension of my tablet’s desktop. 

  • Software score: 5 / 5

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: performance

  • Best performance of any Android device we’ve tested
  • Fastest Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chipset available
  • Still not as fast as an Apple M1-based iPad Air

If high performance is what you’re looking for in an Android tablet, you’ll get it from the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra. It had no trouble handling my most demanding tasks, and the only limitations of the Tab S9 UItra are your imagination, and the range of apps available on Android. 

That latter limitation is not insignificant. Apple has been porting desktop-grade apps like its Logic Pro music software and Final Cut Pro editing suite to its iPad lineup, and the iPad Air and iPad Pro both have desktop-class Apple M1 and Apple M2 processors on board, respectively. That means you can do real-time editing for music and video on the touchscreen.

Lance Ulanoff and Apple MacBook Air M2

This Macbook Air (M2) costs about the same as a Tab S9 Ultra (Image credit: Future)

On the Tab S9 Ultra, I tried editing large image files in Lightroom, and the tablet was very responsive. It was able to use AI to detect my subject for masking, and image adjustments happened as I moved the sliders, without delay. It didn’t feel as speedy as Lightroom on my Mac mini (M2), which uses the same processor as the big iPad Pro 12.9, but it was faster than on any other mobile device I’ve used. 

Ultimately, the ecosystem and device you prefer comes down to which apps and services you need. If your favorite apps run on Android, the Tab S9 Ultra will handle them well. For all drawing, writing and journaling tasks, the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra can’t be beat. 

If, however, you’re going to be editing video or music, those specialized tools are simply better on the iPad right now. You’ll find competent software on Android, but the iPad is closer to real laptop power, while the Tab S9 Ultra is just really powerful. 

  • Performance score: 4 / 5

Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra review: battery

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)
  • Huge battery that easily lasts all day
  • Faster charging would be nice
  • The battery is so big it can reverse-charge your phone

The best thing about having a gigantic display on a tablet is all the space that’s behind it for the battery. Samsung could have made the Tab S9 Ultra bigger, but I’m glad it didn’t. 

The base-model Galaxy Tab S9 is thicker than the Tab S9 Ultra, and if Samsung had made the Ultra the same thickness, we’d have a bigger battery, but It would also be heavier. I’d rather sacrifice a little battery power to make this a lighter tablet, since the battery is already so big. 

You can start watching 4K video that you download from Amazon Prime and finish a full 12-hour season before the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra needs a recharge. In more intensive work tests, using the tablet all day for typing, browsing, sketching and some occasional gaming distractions, the Tab S9 Ultra lasted through a full eight-hour workday with power to spare for the long train ride home.

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

The back cover flips down to reveal the S Pen (Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

The Tab S9 Ultra charges at a respectable 45 watts, and while this would be good on a smartphone with a battery less than half the size, given that this is such a huge cell I would have liked faster charging. It can take almost a couple of hours to charge from zero to full – Samsung says 90 minutes – so make sure you have the best compatible charger to get moving faster. 

Admittedly, this tablet is so big that you probably won’t use it far from an outlet. What’s nice is that the battery is big enough that it can act as a spare for your other devices – when I plugged my Galaxy S23 Ultra into the Tab S9 Ultra, it dutifully began charging. 

Some tablets have wireless charging, but I don’t miss the feature here, and it makes little sense on a tablet this size. It would be very hard to line up the magnets properly every time, and the battery is so large that even the fastest wireless charging would only be a trickle.

  • Battery score: 5 / 5

Should you buy the Samsung Galaxy Tab S8 Ultra?

Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

(Image credit: Future / Philip Berne)

Buy it if…

Don’t buy it if…

Also consider

Not convinced by the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra? Here are a few other options to consider:

How I tested the Samsung Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra

I used the Galaxy Tab S9 Ultra as my primary tablet for a review period of more than a week. I used it as my primary productivity tool for work as much as possible, including photo editing, writing in Google Docs, and communicating via Slack and Airtable. I also paired the Tab S9 Ultra with both USB and Bluetooth keyboards and mice, as well as with external monitors via HDMI.  

I used the Tab S9 Ultra with a variety of streaming services, using both download and streaming features. I also used the tablet extensively for photo editing, viewing, and organizing, primarily with Google Photos but also with Adobe Lightroom. I played games with the tablet, including Call of Duty Mobile, with an Xbox wireless controller connected via Bluetooth. 

I used the Tab S9 Ultra while traveling, taking it on a family trip and using the tablet as my main screen for entertainment while I was away. I checked email, used it for web browsing and communication, and also checked my Nest Indoor Camera from afar. 

For battery testing, I spent time using the tablet nonstop until it died, then charged it again to check the long charging times. I downloaded movies to Amazon Prime and let them play nonstop until the tablet died, timing the total playback. I took the tablet to work and used it successfully for full work days without connecting it to a charger. 

I tested the tablet with benchmarking software that TechRadar's mobile team relies on for internal note keeping and reference, but I typically prefer to report performance only in terms of real-world use cases and responsiveness.

First reviewed August, 2023

Galaxy Z Flip5 trounces Razr 40 Ultra in fold test, surpasses Samsung’s official claims
6:31 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Several days later and after over 400,000 folds, the Great Folding Test Vol. II is finally over. YouTube channel Mrkeybrd showed a multi-day livestream during which the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip5 went head to head with the Motorola Razr 40 Ultra (aka Razr+). The Galaxy Z Flip5 was the last phone standing, after an impressive 401,156 folds. There were some issues along the way, around half way through (223K folds) the hinge lost its ability to maintain half-closed angles. Still, the phone kept chugging along until the 400K mark. The final tally: Galaxy Z Flip5 dead after 401,156 folds, the...

Apple’s iPhone 15 event now tipped to happen on September 12
5:27 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

According to sources close to Bloomberg's Mark Gurman and 9to5Mac, Apple is currently deciding between September 12 and 13 for its iPhone 15 event date. However, the 12th is the more possible scenario. One source of information are Apple's carrier partners. Internal emails are telling employees not to take time off on Wednesday, September 13, due to a "major smartphone announcement". Gurman, on the other hand, is more inclined towards September 12, but he points out that things can still change. Apple's event will be in its usual hybrid format, meaning it will have some pre-recorded...

Lei Jun shares official Xiaomi Mix Fold 3 images
4:35 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The Xiaomi Mix Fold 3 will be fully unveiled on August 14 (Monday), but founder and CEO Lei Jun offers an early peek at the refined design of the phone right now. The Jun describes it with three words: slim, elegant and premium. The photos were posted on Jun’s Twitter account as well as on Weibo. Here’s a look: Xiaomi Mix Fold 3 Zooming in on the four Leica cameras reveals the focal lengths at the near and far ends – 15mm ultra wide and 115mm periscope. The old Mix Fold 2 also had a 15mm ultra wide, however, it was equipped with only an 8MP 45mm portrait camera (2x zoom),...

Asus sheds some light on Zenfone 9 and 10’s bootloader unlocking tool
3:44 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

A Zenfone 9 user contacted Asus' technical support regarding unlocking the bootloader on their smartphone, and in response, Asus said that bootloader unlocking would not be possible for Zenfone 9 and Zenfone 10. The bootloader unlocking tool is also unavailable, which suggests Asus would no longer allow bootloader unlocking on its smartphones. However, a response by the Taiwanese brand's PR representative to XDA-Developers' former Editor-in-Chief Mishaal Rahman is reassuring, even if it's still vague. Rahman's Asus PR contact said that the company's customer support "misunderstood the...

Here are the list of devices eligible for the HarmonyOS 4 beta
2:51 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

Huawei unveiled HarmonyOS 4 a few days ago with loads of new features – an overhauled notification center, Dynamic Island style UI, new cards, more customizations and so on. Below is a list of the devices that are now receiving a beta version of the new OS. Let us repeat that again, this is a beta, so if you want to try it out (and accept the risk of bugs), you can sign up for the beta channel via the My Huawei app. It’s not clear how long it will take for Huawei to release HarmonyOS 4 on the stable channel. Here’s the list, as promised: Phones: Huawei P60 Huawei P60 Pro ...

Netflix releases Gaming Controller app on App Store
2:02 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Tags: | Comments: Off

Netflix has a new Gaming Controller app on the App Store for iOS and iPadOS devices. The app will allow users to play supported gaming titles from Netflix on their TV by pairing their phone or tablet. The app is not yet functional as we await for Netflix to put the final touches. The controller layout features a directional stick on the left side and A-B-X-Y buttons on the right as well as Netflix and menu buttons in the middle. There’s no indication when the Android version of the Gaming Controller app is coming. Netflix Gaming Controller on iOS Netflix Games now supports over 50...

First sighting of Samsung Galaxy S24+ with Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 running Geekbench 6
1:09 pm |

Author: admin | Category: Mobile phones news | Comments: Off

The Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 launched with an unusual CPU configuration – 1 prime, 2+2 performance and 3 efficiency cores. A Geekbench 6.1.0 scorecard just surfaced and it shows that Qualcomm is dropping one efficiency core to add an extra performance core and that the performance cores will run at different speeds. It has 1x prime core at 3.30GHz, then three performance cores at 3.15GHz, joined by two more running at a lower 2.96GHz and, finally, two efficiency cores at 2.27GHz. Here’s a comparison table: Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 (speculative) Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 ...

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