The J7 Prime's screen reproduced 105.4 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, in line with comparably priced phones.
It's also the most colorful, reproducing 189.2 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum.
Reproducing 120 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, the V10 is capable of displaying more colors than can the iPhone 6s Plus (105 percent) and the average smartphone (115 percent), but fewer than the Nexus 6P (187 percent) and the S6 Edge Plus (164 percent).
Credit: Jeremy Lips / Tom's GuideReproducing 98.1 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, the Maxx 2's panel is less colorful than the average smartphone (115 percent), the OnePlus 2 (104.4 percent), the Nexus 5X (106.3 percent) and the Moto X Pure (106.4 percent).
Reproducing an impressive 143.6 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, the GX8 can display more colors than the average smartphone (119.05 percent) and every other phone in this comparison.
It reproduced 128.0 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum — a wide swath for an LCD display.
The Energy XL shows off a lot of colors, covering 187 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum in our tests (the average smartphone scored 135.2 percent).
However, the OnePlus covered 192 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum (100 percent is very good) and notched a Delta - E rating of 2.9 (0 is perfect), which makes it a match for the Galaxy S7 Edge in both color range (189 percent for Samsung's phone) and accuracy (Delta - E of 2.9).
According to our colorimeter, the WT73VR's 17.3 - inch panel produces 108 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum.
It has good color as well, producing 99.9 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum.
The XA2 reproduced 151.3 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum in its Standard display profile.
Our colorimeter measured the Flexx 9's display as capable of rendering 81.3 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum.
Unfortunately, the screen recreated just 58.4 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, far short of the tablet average of 84 percent.
According to our tests, the Inspiron 11's display can render 87 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum.
It can produce 74.6 percent of
the sRGB color spectrum, which is slightly above the Fire Kids (69 percent) and similar to the Xtreme 2 (74.6 percent).
Not exact matches
Our tests also revealed the Xtreme 2 can produce a somewhat narrow range of
colors, 74 percent of the
sRGB spectrum, where 100 percent is better).
The Venue 8's display delivered decent
color reproduction, showing 73.4 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
Color reproduction was just mediocre, with the Venue 7 recreating just 63.6 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
This panel can display 78.8 percent of the
colors in the
sRGB spectrum, which is slightly better than the Fire HD 7 Kids Edition's score of 75.4 percent but a bit below the tablet category average of 90.4 percent.
Color reproduction from the Dell's panel was fairly strong, with the Inspiron 11 3000 capable of displaying 81.7 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
Unfortunately,
color range was below average, with the Lenovo recreating just 72.4 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
In terms of
color range, the Venue 10 7000 features a supersaturated
spectrum covering 170.8 of the
sRGB gamut.
The Lenovo also covered a mediocre range of
colors, reproducing 78.2 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
The ZBook 14u G4 has decent
color, reproducing 118 percent of the visible
sRGB spectrum according to our colorimeter.
Its
color range is also lacking: The X power covered 71 percent of the
sRGB spectrum versus the G4's 110 percent and the Honor 5X's 121 percent.
The ideal laptop screen can display a really wide
spectrum of
colors, allowing it to show at least 100 percent of the
sRGB gamut.
The Tribute 5 doesn't show a ton of
colors, though, reproducing only 75.2 percent of the
sRGB spectrum in our tests.
The direct effect is that some
colors that appear outside the
spectrum are lost, with some icons appearing washed out alongside flat textures, especially when compared to the Galaxy Note 8 or even the Pixel 2 — a phone that is expected to share the same
sRGB mapping as the Pixel 2 XL.
Quite a good number of Google Pixel 2 XL users have reported issues to do with dull, inaccurate
colors, but the search engine giant has defended its creation by claiming that the display is mapped to the
sRGB spectrum in order to maximize
color accuracy.
It's not a bad decision from Google, but what makes this claim strange is the fact that
sRGB is a narrower
spectrum when compared to the P3 wide
color gamut that is supported by the 6 - inch pOLED display screen on the Pixel 2 XL.
The OnePlus X is capable of producing plenty of
colors, covering 186.2 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
The Note 4's screen can display a wide range of
colors, recreating 163 percent of the
sRGB spectrum.
Samsung is the first company to launch a curved gaming monitor that takes advantage of quantum dot technology, which means that the CFG70 will feature vibrant and accurate
color display across a percent
sRGB spectrum.
Additionally, with a
color range that covered 219.6 percent of the
sRGB spectrum, the ZenFone 3 Zoom's screen is even more colorful than the one on the