![]() Thankfully, through both software and touch responsiveness, the gap between 60Hz visuals and higher refresh rates on rival devices seems so much smaller where iPhones are concerned, so the absence of 90Hz (and up) doesn’t sting quite so much, particularly when every other aspect of the viewing experience on the Pro Max is so good.Ĭonsidering you’re paying Pro Max money, it’s frustrating that Apple didn’t implement its 120Hz ProMotion technology into this device but that’s perhaps a characteristically Apple move designed to showcase a more noticeable leap forward in next year’s iPhones. In Android land, rivals sell phones with 90Hz, 120Hz and even 144Hz high refresh rate displays, and a flagship phone asking for flagship money with a display that tops out at 60Hz has to work particularly hard to justify such an omission (see the aforementioned Xperia 1 II). On the other, it’s hard not to argue that – at least on paper – 60Hz just doesn’t cut the mustard for a top-shelf 2020 device. ![]() On the one hand, there wasn’t a lot to complain about with the similarly-specced screen used by the 11 Pro Max and the same is true here the fact that the panel is even larger (and flatter), without a drop in pixel density, can only be a good thing for media lovers and mobile gamers considering the 12 Pro Max. ![]()
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