![]() It’s close, but Samsung’s phone makes the bolder impression here for sure.įlagship screen sizes have pushed the width boundaries about as far as they can go before feeling deeply uncomfortable and unmanageable – so both the Galaxy S8 and LG G6 avoid the issue by pushing height instead.īoth devices ditch the long-standard 16:9 aspect ratio, with the G6 using an 18:9 screen at 5.7in (2,880 x 1,440) and the Galaxy S8 going for 18.5:9 for its 5.8in panel (2,960 x 1,440). But overall, we’re more excited about the Galaxy S8, now that we’ve wielded both for some time, as the seamless, super-curved design just stands out a bit more than LG’s own. ![]() The way the screen blends into the curved bezel is really seamless and attractive.īoth look absolutely brilliant, and if you put it to an office poll, we’d surely have some outliers. It likewise puts a tall screen all over the front of the phone, with no bezel seen on the curved sides, and very little on the top and bottom. The Galaxy S8, on the other hand, is all about those curves. And it’s a flat screen, in case you’re not swayed by curves. You still get slim bezels on the sides and slightly larger ones on the top and bottom, but the G6 is an eye-catcher for sure. This glass-and-metal slab is a beauty of top-end flagship design, and it all starts with the front, which plasters the stunning screen across more than 85% of the phone’s face. Luckily, the G6 is much more than just a unibody G5. ![]()
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