Samsung’s Galaxy Note 8 was the best phone you could buy for about a week. Now Apple has come along and spoiled Samsung’s party with not one but two new phablet-sized phones: the iPhone 8 Plus and the iPhone X. While the new iPhones still don’t come with a stylus, Apple did upgrade them in just about every other way. So how does Samsung’s flagship stack up to Apple’s latest handsets? Let’s take a look.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Size

Apple The iPhone X is significantly smaller than the Note 8.

If you’re looking for the absolute biggest phone you can buy, Samsung wins here. It’s Note 8 has a whopping 6.3-inch display, a good deal larger than the iPhone X’s 5.8-inch one. But screen size doesn’t tell the whole story.

With nearly an inch more screen than the iPhone 8 Plus and way more pixels than the X, you’d expect the Note 8 to be a significantly bigger package, but the dimensions are remarkably similar to the Plus:

Note 8: 162.5 x 74.8 x 8.6 mm

iPhone 8 Plus: 158.4 x 78.1 x 7.5 mm

iPhone X: 138.4 x 67.3 x 7.3 mm

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Display

Jason Snell The iPhone X’s Supe Retina display is simply gorgeous, but the Note 8’s is no slouch.

Both the Note 8 and the iPhone X feature remarkable displays, with the iPhone X representing Apple’s first foray into OLED screens. Samsung edges the iPhone X when it comes to resolution, but we’ll need to compare the two in person to see which comes out on top when it comes to color and brightness. In pure numbers, however, Samsung takes the crown, both in size and resolution:

Note 8: 6.3-inch, 2960 x 1440 Super AMOLED, HDR, 532ppi

iPhone 8 Plus: 5.5-inch, 1920 x 1080 LCD, 401ppi

iPhone X: 5.8-inch, 2436 x 1125 OLED, HDR, 458ppi

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Performance

Apple The A11 chip in the new iPhones is something to behold.

Comparing iPhones to Galaxy phones has never been an apples to apples comparison, but on paper, Apple’s A11 Bionic chip is a screamer. With six cores and 4.3 billion transistors, it looks to give the Note 8’s Snapdragon 835 a real run for its money, at least in terms of raw power. In real-world use, however, the phones will be pretty close in speed, but the Note 8’s 6GB of RAM could pull it closer in benchmarks. Apple has traditionally been stingy with its RAM thanks to the intense iOS optimizations, with the iPhone 8 Plus topping out at 2GB. The A11 chip also integrates an Apple-designed GPU with a three-core design that should give games a boost.

Note 8: Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 (octo-core, 10nm, up to 2.45GHz)

iPhone 8 Plus: A11 Bionic chip (septa-core)

iPhone X: A11 Bionic chip (septa-core)

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Battery

Adam Patrick Murray/IDG The Note 8’s battery is great, but will the iPhone X’s be better?

We won’t know exactly how big the new iPhones’ batteries are until iFixit’s customary tear-down, but based on Apple’s claims, the iPhone 8 Plus will last “about the same” as the 7 Plus, while the X will last “up to two hours longer,” and both phones now support Qi wireless charging like the Note 8. The Note 8’s 3,300mAH battery gets around 9 hours of real-world use, more than enough to get through a full day of use, and the 7 Plus was equally long-lasting. If the X truly lasts two hours longer than the 8 Plus, it could put it over the top.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Storage

Doug Duvall/IDG The S Pen isn’t the only thing the Note 8 has that the iPhone doesn’t—it also has an SD card slot.

All three phones offer a base model with 64GB of storage. However, the iPhone 8 Plus and iPhone X add a 256GB tier that isn’t available on the Note 8 (at least not in the U.S. anyway). However, the Note 8 includes a microSD slot so you can upgrade the storage as much as you’d like, and for a lot less than the $150 Apple is charging for 192 extra gigs of storage.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Camera

Adam Patrick Murray/IDG The Note 8 is a great camera, but the iPhone X’s might be even better.

Apple and Samsung have been slugging it out over camera performance for generations of phones, and this year is no different. Let’s start with the specs:

Note 8: Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras, f/1.7 and f/2.4, dual optical image stabilization, 2X optical zoom

iPhone 8 Plus: Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras, f/1.8 and f/2.8, optical image stabilization on main lens, 2X optical zoom

iPhone X: Dual 12MP wide-angle and telephoto cameras, f/1.8 and f/2.4, dual optical image stabilization, 2X optical zoom

All three phones have very similar cameras, with the Note 8 edging out the iPhone X slightly when it comes to aperture. Additionally, all three phones feature a “bokeh” mode—Portrait on the iPhone and Live Focus on the Note 8—but the Note 8 offers the ability to adjust the level of background blur, which isn’t available on the iPhone. However, the iPhones have a new feature called Portrait Lighting that simulates various instances of studio-style lighting after portraits are shot.

When it comes to video recording, the iPhone 8 Plus and X both film in 4K at 60fps, while the Note 8 tops out at 30fps. Additionally the iPhones have slo-mo video support for 1080p at 240fps, while the Note 8 only supports 720p.

As always, however, the proof will be in the pudding. Apple has introduced an improved image signal processor for the new iPhones as well as some auto-focus and lighting tricks, but we were pretty impressed with the Note 8’s new camera too.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: AR and VR

Doug Duvall/IDG When it comes to AR and VR, the Note 8 and the iPhone X are in different leagues.

The Bionic in the iPhones’ new A11 chip means it has a neural engine with a dual-core design that performs up to 600 billion operations per second for real-time processing to help with Face ID, Animoji, and augmented reality. Samsung doesn’t specifically tout any AR benefits of the Note 8, but Google’s new ARCore will allow the phone to take advantage of the emerging tech, but it remains to be seen if it will be as advanced as Apple’s ARKit. The Note 8 does beat the iPhone 8 Plus and X when it comes to VR, however. Pop the phone into a Gear VR headset and you’ll be able to watch 360-degree videos and play immersive games, something no iPhone can do yet.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Biometrics

Apple You have to unlock the iPhone X with your face—there’s no more fingerprint sensor.

The iPhone 8 Plus includes the standard Touch ID fingerprint-scanning sensor. However, since Apple has eliminated the home button on the iPhone X, that phone doesn’t have Touch ID. In its place is Face ID, which uses the TrueDepth camera system to build a “unique facial map.” The Note 8 features an array of options for unlocking your phones, including fingerprint, retina, and face. The fingerprint scanner isn’t in the greatest spot and we had loads of issues with facial recognition, but the retina scanner worked flawlessly during our testing (though others haven’t had the same result). Apple promises that it’s just as secure as Touch ID, but we’ll have to test it out to be sure.

iPhone 8 Plus vs. iPhone X vs. Note 8: Price

Adam Patrick Murray/IDG The iPhone 8 Plus is the cheapest of the lot.

While much has been made of the iPhone X’s $999 price tag, it’s really not all that much higher than the Note 8’s $930 price. But the iPhone 8 Plus is practically a bargain compared to both of them:

Note 8: $930 (64GB)

iPhone 8 Plus: $799 (64GB), $949 (256GB)

iPhone X: $999 (64GB), $1149 (256GB)