The Galaxy Tab S4 is in a weird place, specs wise. Priced at Rs. 57,900, the flagship tablet from Samsung comes in at a decidedly flagship price, and boasts of attractive specs as long as you don’t pay much attention to the processor inside it – a Snapdragon 835. It’s a big part of my job to look at specs though, so when I first got this big back box with ‘Tab S4’ written on it in Samsung’s favorite font with their favorite blue color, I was a bit underwhelmed about seeing a processor that’s a generation old, and will be 2 generations old once Qualcomm announces its new flagship Snadragon 855 Mobile Platform (likely by the end of this year). So, even though I wouldn’t blame you if you were tempted to disregard this tablet without a second glance, I would be amiss if I didn’t tell you that it performs really well regardless.

Before I share my thoughts on the performance of the Tab S44, let’s take a quick look at the specs Samsung has packed inside this big tablet.

Galaxy Tab S4 Performance Review

As always, I ran a couple of benchmarks on the Tab S4 to get a general idea about what to expect from this tablet , followed by simple everyday usage and some gaming just to see how it performs in real life scenarios.

I put the Tab S4 through two benchmarks – Geekbench 4, and AnTuTu and the results were pretty much what you’d expect from a tablet packing in a Snapdragon 835 paired with 4GB of RAM. In Geekbench 4, the Tab S4 scored 1854 in the single-core test, and 6365 in the multi-core test which is on par with other Snapdragon 835 devices and obviously lower than devices packing in a Snapdragon 845. In AnTuTu, the Tab S4 managed a pretty decent score of 201,986.

Real World Usage

In terms of real world usage, the Tab S4 doesn’t disappoint. Whether you’re using it for productivity, watching movies, or playing the odd game of PUBG Mobile (don’t), the Tab S4 can handle it all perfectly.

In Fortnite too, the Tab S4 performs great. The graphics are some of the best I’ve seen on Android devices, and the game does look better on a bigger screen than it does on smaller Android flagships. The experience is obviously still not as good as it is on iOS devices, but it’s definitely better than most Android phones.

The Galaxy Tab S4 is a flagship Android tablet and it performs like one. Samsung is clearly going after the iPad Pro with this tablet, and it’s definitely a tablet worthy of your attention. Performance wise, the tablet manages to handle everything superbly well, and doesn’t really feel like it’s being powered by a generation old Snapdragon 835 Mobile Platform. Bottom line is, if you’re interested in buying an Android tablet that will not let you down (because most of them will) the Tab S4 is one hell of an option to go with.