Adreno 730 Link (EXCLUSIVE)
When the 730 first launched, it was a beast—averaging 55-60 fps at max settings. However, the original Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 (Samsung 4nm) had notorious thermal throttling. After 15 minutes of gaming, the 730 often dropped to 45 fps to avoid melting your palm.
While newer chips like the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (Adreno 740) and Gen 3 (Adreno 750) now steal the headlines, the Adreno 730 remains a critical benchmark. It powers dozens of devices—from the Samsung Galaxy S22 Ultra to the OnePlus 10 Pro—and represents a pivotal moment in mobile graphics architecture.
For a budget-conscious gamer today, a Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 device with the Adreno 730 offers 90% of the flagship experience for 60% of the price. That’s a win. Do you still rock a phone with an Adreno 730? What games are you playing on it? Let me know in the comments below! adreno 730
In simple terms: Older GPUs often wasted power rendering parts of a scene that you couldn't even see. The Adreno 730 uses tile-based rendering more intelligently, combined with a new (Graphics Memory) system. This allows the GPU to keep more data on-chip rather than constantly shuttling it back to system RAM.
The Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 moved production to TSMC’s 4nm process . This same Adreno 730, running on TSMC silicon, suddenly delivered sustained 60 fps with far fewer frame drops. The hardware wasn't the problem; the foundry was. When the 730 first launched, it was a
Let’s break down what makes this GPU tick, how it performs in 2024, and whether you should still consider buying a phone with it. The Adreno 730 wasn't just a clock speed bump over the Adreno 660. It was a ground-up redesign. Qualcomm finally moved away from the "binary slicing" approach to a Flexible Rendering model.
When Qualcomm launched the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 in late 2021, all eyes were on its CPU cores and power efficiency. But lurking beneath the heat spreader was a component that would become the backbone of flagship Android gaming for over two years: the Adreno 730 . While newer chips like the Snapdragon 8 Gen
If ray tracing is a dealbreaker, you need a Gen 2 or newer device. Yes, but with caveats.