So, if you want the colours to pop more, choose 'Saturated'. Even to the point of adjusting contrast, gamma and white balance. However, if you head into the colour scheme settings, you can tune the panel to your preference.
Its default colour scheme is 'Vivid', which sometimes has the tendency to push certain colours a little too far on the saturation front. Part of the beauty of this display lies in the settings though. The colours are lively and vibrant, and the dark elements are very dark. In fact, with this combination of sharpness, brightness and contrast, it's comfortably one of the best displays in the mid-range phone market. Plus, with 395 pixel-per-inch sharpness, it's plenty crisp enough that you don't ever see individual pixels. The thing that immediately stood out to us upon powering it on was how bright and vivid it was. Not only is it bright - reaching peaks of 1300 nits - but it also supports up to 120Hz refresh rates and even has support for HDR10+ and Dolby Vision.