Antutu — Allwinner H313

A high Antutu score guarantees nothing about your experience if the software is bloated. Conversely, a low Antutu score on the H313 is perfectly acceptable if you use the device for what it was designed for – silent, cool, cheap 4K playback.

| OS | Average Antutu Score | Notes | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Stock Android 10 | 60,500 | Baseline. Best for media. | | Android 10 (debloated) | 63,200 | Removes 20+ background services. | | Android TV (ATV) ROM | 58,800 | Leanback UI uses slightly more GPU memory. | | LibreELEC / CoreELEC | N/A (No Antutu) | This is Linux. Performance is incredible for Kodi (4K UI butter-smooth). | | EmuELEC (Retro gaming) | 48,000 (emulation only) | Emulation overhead reduces raw score, but games run fine. |

In the crowded world of budget System-on-Chips (SoCs) for TV boxes and embedded devices, the Allwinner H313 has carved out a specific niche. Positioned as a cost-effective, power-sipping solution for 4K media playback, it often gets compared to its older sibling, the H616, and rivals from Rockchip and Amlogic.

In an era where cheap smartphones score 300,000+, the H313’s score looks pathetic on paper. But benchmarks exist to measure use cases , not ego. For streaming 4K AV1 video inside Kodi or CoreELEC, the H313 performs like a chip scoring 200,000. For opening Chrome with 10 tabs, it performs like a chip from 2015.