The primary benefits for me personally are:
1. Presentation. The glass on the back, the size to screen ratio, and the general feel are all extremely pleasing. When I realized the device was so attractive, I promptly removed the transparent case that was included with the kit.
2. The screen is quite big, brilliant, and reproduces colors in natural mode with excellent quality (in vivid, there is some sort of acid tin). I personally don't find the enormous size or the hole from the front camera to be an issue.
3. The sound is more comparable to that of a high-quality laptop than that of a phone. In comparison to the prior Pixel 2 XL.
4. UI. Although in some aspects it is even more well-thought-out than the default Google one, it doesn't actually fall short. It is also aesthetically pleasing to switch up the standard backgrounds and icons. Bigsby almost entirely shuts down, which is a benefit. Prior to that, I had a Galaxy S2, but the interface was so terrible that I didn't purchase another Samsung for almost ten years.
5. Efficiency. Everything moves quickly, the most demanding games run at a steady 60 frames per second, and the phone itself gets a bit warm.
6. 120 hertz paired with such strength is pretty cool, but after that, using another phone is difficult because of all the jerks you witness.
7. A very wide angle. It's a cool product that is now available everywhere but I didn't have it previously.
8. Left-side handle. As a left-handed person, it's beneficial to me. I don't actually use a pen, though.
9. Facial recognition is quick and accurate.
10. A film is applied from the factory to the screen, top, and bottom faces. A little, but nice nonetheless because it's so challenging to stick something of this caliber yourself. Meanwhile, dishonest vendors continue to provide customers with film stickers prior to purchase.