How much of a difference does 120hz screen make?

Devyansh

Novice
Recently I got to use a galaxy S23 and the 120hz screen was a treat, this made me think about going for phones with a faster refresh rate screen.
My question is, how much difference would it make for me on a day to day basis if I get a faster screen? I dived into the discourse and got to know that not all apps are made for 120hz screens and may look/function their best on a 60hz screen, what is the truth about this?
I only use my phone to talk or use the camera, messaging and social media is done usually on the laptop.
Should I keep the screen refresh rate in mind when I get my next phone or its really not that big of a deal after a few days?
 
The only reason I switched to Android from iOS was the 120Hz display, and it was a great move. Now, whenever I use my old iOS device (non-Pro models), my eyes feel strained after a period of time.
 
The reason why I always buy the pro variant rather than normal iPhones is coz of 120hz. It is very very huge but scum apple charges twice for pro models. It surely isn't worth twice but for apple customers, we don't have any other option.

For android I have seen even 20k phones having 120hz screen.
 
Refresh rate is not everything, consider other aspects before thinking about Hz. There is no point in buying 120Hz device if you gonna run it at 60Hz because you aren't getting your expected battery backup.

I think high refresh rate have more value on the desktop screen, if you spend more time on desktop than your phone.
 
Apps optimization for higher refresh rate varies by skin, at least on Samsung's One UI it's well implemented, most apps are running on 120hz when you set to high refresh rate in settings.
 
I only use my phone to talk or use the camera, messaging and social media is done usually on the laptop.
Then it wouldn't matter. Also, 120 alone doesn't mean much. The OS along with the apps need to be properly optimised in order to get true benefits of 120hz. I'm using a 120 myself but in many apps there's frame drops/lags/jitters ... whatever the term is. Take example of the Amazon app on Android. Like watching a 24 fps movie. Even on WhatsApp and other basic apps to I see notable frame drops. It's actually worse. Because in some places you see 120, in others all these frame drops, so your brain has difficulty in perceiving it. In that case, it's much better to just have a 60hz which is able to do 60hz everywhere. Now if you actually compared true 120 (sustained 120) vs 60, then nobody on earth would ever go back to 60, like never ever.

This is why people say iPhone 60 hz is better than Android 120. And it's mostly true, due to the heaven and hell difference between app optimisation between two platforms.
 
This is why people say iPhone 60 hz is better than Android 120. And it's mostly true, due to the heaven and hell difference between app optimisation between two platforms.
Not really! I tried iphone 13 60hz screen after using 120hz Samsung phone for 1.5 years - I couldn't stand jitters on iphone. The animation are surely smooth on iphone but no way the experience is better on iphone.
 
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