Before Google was officially announced, the Pixel 7 Pro had passed its tests, and someone managed to run the Antutu benchmark on the flagship machine. Unfortunately, the results are quite disappointing, as the Tensor G2, which provides computing power for smartphones, failed to beat older chipsets like the Snapdragon 888 and A15 Bionic.


Although Google has the motivation to make improvements, it is disappointing that the Tensor G2, which actually uses , Samsung 4 nano architecture, failed to complete the AnTuTu benchmark with high scores. During the test conducted by Gadgetfull BD, they also managed to showcase the Pixel 7 Pro's appearance design on Facebook, which scored over 800,000 and scored 801,116 points.
When browsing the Antutu rankings, we found that the Pixel 7 Pro and its chip Tensor G2 are both seriously behind their competitors. Flagships with the Snapdragon 8 Plus Gen1 and Dimensity 9000 Plus as the core currently occupy the highest position on the rankings, while the Asus 's ROG Phone 6 series dominates the model rankings. On iOS and iPadOS, Antutu performed poorly on these devices for some reason, although Apple 's M-series and A-series chipsets outperformed the Android SoC in other benchmark applications.
Previously, the Tensor G2's Geekbench 5 score leaked, as disappointing as the results on Antutu, as the Snapdragon 888 and A14 Bionic effortlessly beat Google's latest SoC in both single-core and multi-core tests. Such poor performance of this custom chip is not necessarily a reality in the early stages, but also a problem with insufficient software optimization, especially since the benchmark application has not been updated to properly support Tensor G2, and when it is updated, we will provide some updated scores.
However, assuming these scores remain the same, Google has a tough battle against companies like Qualcomm and Apple, and it will be far from an easy small-scale battle.