In 2020, the Snapdragon 765 showed that no one really needs a Qualcomm 800-series chip

OnePlus Nord
OnePlus Nord (Image credit: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central)

If there's a constant among all the best Android phones today, it is that they're all powered by Qualcomm's chipsets. Qualcomm is the de facto choice for phone makers releasing a flagship device, and in 2020 it solidified that position with the Snapdragon 865.

But the bigger story in 2020 is the introduction of the Snapdragon 765. Everyone knows what to expect from a flagship Qualcomm design, but with the Snapdragon 765, the chip vendor showed that it could offer the same caliber of performance at a lower cost.

As a result, the Snapdragon 765 powered some of the best phones of 2020, including the Google Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G, the OnePlus Nord, Motorola Edge, the U.S. variant of Samsung's Galaxy A71, and many more.

What made the Snapdragon 765 stand out was the performance on offer. With two Cortex A76 cores and six energy-efficient A55 cores, the chipset delivered the same level of performance as 2018's flagship Snapdragon 845. Simply put, the Snapdragon 765 showed us that mid-range phones can deliver the same level of fluidity as flagship-tier chipsets for most day-to-day tasks.

The Snapdragon 765 hit the sweet spot for day-to-day performance.

When talking about day-to-day usage, it's important to note that we're now at a point where even budget phones deliver reliable performance. I've used plenty of budget phones powered by the Snapdragon 720, 732, 730, and the 662 this year, and they all held up just fine in daily use.

In that context, the Snapdragon 765 paved the way for phone manufacturers to introduce devices with flagship-tier performance for as low as $335. Sure, devices like the Pixel 5 debuted at $700, but the chipset introduced a new wave of value-focused 5G phones.

Google Pixel 4a 5G

Source: Hayato Huseman / Android Central (Image credit: Source: Hayato Huseman / Android Central)

That's another point in favor of the Snapdragon 765. While the Snapdragon 865 featured an external 5G modem, Qualcomm went with an integrated 5G modem on the Snapdragon 765; so instead of two distinct modules taking up space on the mainboard, the Snapdragon 765 delivered an all-in-one solution.

Talking about the performance, I pitted the Snapdragon 765 against the 865, and it was clear that the more affordable 765 chipset was more than adequate for most day-to-day use cases. For both CPU and GPU performance, the Snapdragon 765 held up incredibly well against Qualcomm's flagship designs.

Qualcomm Snapdragon 765

Source: Qualcomm (Image credit: Source: Qualcomm)

A lot of this is down to the work Arm has done over the last three years to optimize its Cortex cores. Arm is a UK-based designer that has revolutionized the mobile chip industry. It designs the instructions set that companies like Qualcomm, Apple, MediaTek, Samsung LSI, and HiSilicon use to build mobile chipsets.

Every phone you see today — whether it's Android or an iPhone — features Arm's instruction set; some companies license Arm's Cortex CPU while others license the architecture itself and build their own CPU design. Qualcomm used to be in the latter category, but over the last three years it went with stock Cortex cores with a few customizations to the memory scheduler and interconnects to stand out a bit more from MediaTek.

I'm excited to see how Qualcomm builds on the Snapdragon 700 series with the 775.

The Cortex A76 is the performance core on the Snapdragon 765, and it debuted at the end of 2018, delivering huge performance gains over the A73. It was able to hit the sweet spot between performance and efficiency, and that's why Qualcomm continues to use the core even today.

The Snapdragon 765-powered phone that I used the most this year was the OnePlus Nord. OnePlus said at the launch of the device that the performance of the chipset convinced the company to use it in its first mid-range device in lieu of the flagship Snapdragon 865.

OnePlus Nord vs. OnePlus 8

Source: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central (Image credit: Source: Apoorva Bhardwaj / Android Central)

I used most Android flagships in 2020, and the Nord felt just as fluid and capable as the Galaxy S20, Note 20 Ultra, or the OnePlus 8T in most daily tasks. The only area that it didn't deliver the same level of performance is gaming; in visually-demanding titles, the chipset defaulted to medium settings.

Qualcomm's decision to launch the Snapdragon 765 was a masterstroke. Not everyone is interested in buying $1,000 flagships, and the chipset delivers the same level of performance from devices that cost significantly less. I'm particularly interested in seeing how Qualcomm builds on the design with the Snapdragon 775. The upcoming chipset should offer sizeable gains across the board, and that makes me excited to use mid-range phones in 2021.

The Snapdragon 765 changed the paradigm for mid-range phones and value flagships. You can look forward to Qualcomm continuing that momentum into 2021 and beyond.

Harish Jonnalagadda
Senior Editor - Asia

Harish Jonnalagadda is a Senior Editor overseeing Asia at Android Central. He leads the site's coverage of Chinese phone brands, contributing to reviews, features, and buying guides. He also writes about storage servers, audio products, and the semiconductor industry. Contact him on Twitter at @chunkynerd.