The Galaxy Note 4 scored highly for its color accuracy, peak brightness, screen viewability in high ambient light, display power efficiency. The phablet-sized device’s Quad HD display also received accolades for having the highest display resolution on the market—almost double the amount of a modern HDTV— the sharpest of all smartphones currently for sale. Dr. Soneira adds: If you’re worried about the Super AMOD making your photos videos look too saturated, DisplayMate adds that while the Note 4’s Adaptive Display mode delivers significantly higher color saturation, it also features a broader color gamut—about 130 percent more than most stard smartphone or tablet displays. “Some people like the extra saturated vibrant colors,” wrote Dr. Soneira. ”us it is useful for special applications, for viewing the display in medium to high levels of ambient light, because it offsets some of the reflected light glare that washes out the on-screen image colors.” The Galaxy ge, on the other h, isn’t as much of a gimmick as I’d previously thought. The ge screen apparently helps reduce display power to extend the running time on the battery, DisplayMate adds, “the OD display on a flexible plastic substrate for the Galaxy Note ge is now essentially the same as on a traditional glass substrate for the Galaxy Note 4, even at 500+ pixels per inch 2560×1600 resolution.” You can read the display shootout in its entirety over at DisplayMate. I personally can’t wait to see how the Galaxy Note 4 performs in everyday use— how it compares visually to some of its major competitors, like the G3.