Perhaps the biggest difference is not between the old and the new models, but between their respective gaps.
The Galaxy S8 and S8+ were almost identical last year, whereas 2018's Galaxy S9 and S9+ differ from each other more significantly.
(This might also translate in a larger price difference, but Samsung has not shared final details on pricing yet.)
There are four distinctions: Screen, battery, RAM, and camera.
The screen is 0.4 inches larger or the S9+, which is a nice real estate bump considering that the difference in size is negligible, at least in hands.
I use an iPhone X as my daily driver, which is a 5.8-inch device, and I still felt that the slightly larger S9+ got more value out of its added size than its smaller sibling.
The battery, on the other hand, is a full 500mAh larger (3000 vs 3500), which could translate in a solid battery life difference; and the extra 2GB of RAM, too, might come in handy as apps get bigger and the device's battery wears off over time.
But the major difference is still the secondary 12MP telephoto camera, which is only present on the larger S9+.
The dual-lens system is borrowed from last year's Galaxy Note 8, and Samsung again uses it to offer 2x zoom photos without quality loss and some bokeh effects to enhance portrait mode pictures.
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