Under the hood, these two phones take notably different paths. The Oppo A6 Max runs on a Qualcomm Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 while the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G uses the Samsung Exynos 1580 — both built on a 4 nm process, which keeps power consumption in check. However, the A56 5G holds a consistent CPU clock advantage across all core clusters, with its peak core reaching 2.9 GHz against the A6 Max's 2.63 GHz. That translates to snappier performance in single-threaded tasks like app launches and UI responsiveness.
The memory picture tells an even starker story. The A56 5G ships with 12 GB of RAM versus the A6 Max's 8 GB, and more critically, its maximum memory bandwidth reaches 51.2 GB/s — exactly double the A6 Max's 25.6 GB/s. Higher bandwidth means the processor can feed data to the CPU and GPU far faster, reducing bottlenecks during demanding tasks like gaming, video editing, or running multiple apps simultaneously. The A6 Max's only counterpoint here is a higher maximum supported memory of 16 GB, though it ships below that ceiling and the real-world headroom advantage goes to the A56 5G's larger base RAM.
On raw performance metrics, the Samsung Galaxy A56 5G holds a clear and multi-dimensional advantage — faster CPU clocks, more RAM, a higher GPU clock speed, and substantially greater memory bandwidth. The A6 Max is by no means slow, but users who push their phones with games, multitasking, or media workloads will find the A56 5G consistently has more headroom to work with.