This is especially the case for the A14, since this particular model was the first time Samsung implemented the use of UFS 2.2 storage. Bumping up the storage technology to this level already puts it in the “snappy enough” category, essentially having almost 80% the speed of a SATA SSD.
The kicker, however, is that the differences are only negligible if we are talking about similar variants. This means that if you are using the lowest 4GB RAM 64GB storage A14 model, then that alone might already be enough of a reason to consider a small bump in “convenience” tiers. Especially since 4GB RAM is already feeling tighter and tighter for smartphones as 8GB becomes the baseline “snappy” standard.
Performance Potential
If you are using any apps that require heavy-duty performance, then the A15 simply loses instantly. In gaming, for example, many of the newer games require at least a Helio G96 to run smoothly at reasonable settings. You would be pressed hard to push the performance of the Helio G80 if you use game apps competitively.
Then there’s the jump from PLS LCD to Super AMOLED. The A15 also wins this category, hands down. Especially when considering other differences between both screens. Well… having a 90Hz refresh rate isn’t exactly superior. But it does help smoothen the overall feel of the A15 better than the A14.
Then again, in practice, it only ever becomes a true issue when refresh-rate-sensitive apps are involved (such as rhythm games). So we suppose ol’ regular 60Hz would still be perfectly fine when browsing your favorite social media apps.
Operating System
Getting One Ui 6.1 out of the box certainly is a welcome advantage. But again, these are on the lower end of the product spectrum. It wouldn’t really make much of a difference with a few QoL differences here and there when it comes to screen customization and UI adjustments. Unless, the OS itself is the key to optimizing the product’s specification (of which the two are not).
Just be careful not to install any suspicious old apps on your yet-to-be-updated Galaxy A14.
Longevity
I mean… both were released in 2023. Purchase history-wise, you should ideally refrain from buying a new phone until a few years have passed. Especially since you purchased an A series Samsung Galaxy phone, which is targeted at very budget-oriented consumers.
Conclusion: Daily Driver or Bust
The price gap between the two hurls a wrench into our upgrade considerations. Since, even if accounting for the significant quality gap between a 4G 64GB Galaxy A14 and 6GB 128GB Galaxy A15, the former is still much, much cheaper. As such, if all you really do is very basic PC stuff, then doubling your purchase budget to jump to an A15 isn’t going to be a wise choice.
Then again, if you are even anything a bit more than a casual user, then the perks of the A15 would become more than enough to consider the upgrade, even if technically the two products are just 10 months apart release-date-wise.