Samsung Galaxy A57 Specification, Antutu score & BGMI Gaming Test

Key Specification
- 6.7 inches Super AMOLED+ Screen
- Samsung Exynos 1680 (4 nm)
- 8GB + 128GB ROM
- Triple Camera (50MP+12MP+5MP)
- 5000 mAh
- Android 16 (One UI 8.5)
DESIGN
Build:
Aluminum frame, Glass front & glass back (Gorilla Glass Victus+ Protection)
Weight:
180g
IP Rating:
IP68/IP69 dust tight and water resistant
Face Unlock:
Yes
Fingerprint:
In display, Optical
DISPLAY
Screen:
6.7 inches 120Hz Super AMOLED+ Screen with 1080 x 2340 pixels resolution
Touch Sampling Rate:
480Hz
Peak Brightness:
1200 nits (HBM), 1900 nits (peak)
Extra Features:
Corning Gorilla Glass Victus+, Mohs level 5 - Protection
PERFORMANCE
OS:
Android 16, (Upto 6 Android upgrades), One UI 8.5
Chipset:
Samsung Exynos 1680 (4 nm)
CPU:
Octa-core (1x2.9 GHz Cortex-720 + 4x2.6 GHz Cortex-720 + 3x1.95 GHz Cortex-520)
GPU:
Xclipse 550
MEMORY & STORAGE
RAM:
8GB LPDDR5X RAM
Storage:
128GB UFS-3.1 Storage
Storage Variant:
128GB 8GB RAM, 256GB 8GB RAM, 256GB 12GB RAM, 512GB 12GB RAM
Card Slot:
No
AnTuTu GeekBench Score
GeekBench Single core:
1371
GeekBench Multi-core:
3994
AnTuTu Score:
1,344,876
CPU:
499,003
GPU:
326,613
Memory:
199,672
UX:
319,588
Gaming Performance & FPS
Yes and no. The A57 isn’t marketed as a “gaming‑phone” like Red Magic, ROG & Vivo iQOO but with the Exynos 1680 chipset, Xclipse 550‑based GPU, and a 120Hz Super AMOLED+ display can handle heavy games like PUBG Mobile, BGMI, Call of Duty: Mobile, and Genshin Impact at high or medium‑high settings, which is rare for a mid‑range A‑series device.
The Galaxy A57 runs Samsung’s Exynos 1680 with Xclipse 550 GPU. Samsung claims it offers roughly 2× better gaming performance than the older Exynos 1580 in the A56. Thanks to RDNA‑style architecture and better thermal management. In real‑world gaming it feels close to upper‑midrange Snapdragon/Dimensity chips, but still lags behind true flagship Snapdragon 8‑series power in long‑term sustained loads.
On the benchmarks tests, the A57 can comfortably run PUBG Mobile and BGMI on HDR + Extreme or Smooth + Extreme+ settings with smooth frame rates, but this phone not support max (Ultra Extreme 120 FPS). Expect stable 84–90 FPS in most maps, with minor drops in dense fights, depending on your RAM (6/8/12 GB) variant.
In my tests, Genshin Impact runs at Medium–High graphics 60fps and delivered 45–50 FPS on average, sometimes dipping 36fps in crowded scenes. This is far better than older A‑series phones, but not as rock‑solid as flagship Snapdragon‑based phones running on High or Ultra.
This phone has13% larger vapor chamber and AI‑based power scheduling to keep thermals under control. In our tests, the A57 stays warm but not achieve uncomfortable hot during 30–45 minute sessions, though you may see mild throttling after 60+ minutes of continuous heavy gaming.
The A57 comes with a 6.7‑inch 120Hz Super AMOLED (+ or Vision Booster‑style panel), giving fluid scrolling and smoother gameplay in compatible games. Colors are vibrant and bright, which helps with outdoor visibility while gaming.
If your priority is smooth gaming at 60–90 FPS, good battery, and Samsung’s software/support, and you want to save money for S‑series flagships, the A57 is a strong contender. If your aim for max settings and 120 FPS on all heavy games, you’re best choice Snapdragon‑powered flagship or gaming‑phone.