(A Samsung Galaxy S8 and its included earbuds (left), and an Apple iPhone SE with its included EarPods earbuds.Jeff Dunn/Business Insider)
Let’s be clear here: Don’t buy a smartphone because of the headphones in its box. Buy a smartphone because it’s fast, or because it takes great photos, or because you think it looks cool.
Unless it comes with a pair that’s truly spectacular, you should judge your phone on its merits as a phone.
With that said, one of the many things Samsung has touted about its new Galaxy S8 phones is the pair of earbuds that come packaged along with them. The company says they’re a $99 value on their own, and that their sound has been tuned by AKG, an audio-focused subsidiary that Samsung acquired as part of its big Harman deal last year.
All of which is to say that Samsung thinks the Galaxy S8’s earbuds are a cut above the cheapo pairs that are often are saddled with other smartphones.
After two weeks of testing, I can say Samsung isn’t wrong: The AKG-branded earbuds are sharper sounding and more competently put together than most freebie extras. They run circles around Apple’s EarPods, by far the most ubiquitous of all bundled earbuds, in the sound department, meaning Samsung can flaunt at least one victory in its self-professed “dream to overcome” the iPhone maker.
(Jeff Dunn/Business Insider)
Compared to the EarPods, the sound of the Galaxy S8’s earbuds is much more balanced. That’s not a particularly high bar to clear: The iPhone’s pair has long emphasized the bass and low-end above all else, oftentimes to the point where it overwhelms the rest of a track. The Galaxy S8’s earbuds are far tidier — they focus mainly on the mids, with a bit of a boost to the upper bass, but they don’t go out of their way to make sure you hear one frequency no matter what.
With a hip-hop track like Jay-Z and Kanye West’s “No Church in the Wild,” for instance, the EarPods’ bass has more oomph, but it’s blobby, and it helps make the rest of the instrumentation feel muddied together. The Galaxy S8’s earbuds still get you a fair amount of low-end thump, but it’s more restrained, and the vocals come off as crisper and better-defined.
They also bring much more clarity. The EarPods’ big shortcoming is how much they “veil” the highs and mids, making it sound like a fog has been cast over much of any given song. On a rocker like Phoenix’s “1901,” just about everything but the bass drum sounds duller and boomier than it does with the Galaxy S8’s earbuds. When the chorus hits, there’s an alright sense of energy, but it’s harder to pick out and separate the various pieces of the instrumentation. The Galaxy S8’s earbuds do better to catch everything being thrown at it.