i have heard this before and i’m curious what you guys think, if you have any anecdotal experience. i have heard, and this makes some sense to me, that because it is a separate piece of glass that can be easily peeled off of the screen and it is not laminated to anything for more strength, that glass screen protectors are inherently much easier to crack and shatter than a bare screen, or a screen with a thin TPU film screen protector. this gives people the impression with how often phones get dropped and how often glass screen protectors break, that most or all of those drops would have damaged their screen if they didn’t have a glass screen protector.
ever since i got my first smartphone, which was a galaxy S5 when it was new, i have only used glass screen protectors, but i am now trying out TPU for the first time, and how thin they are makes me nervous that i’m going to drop my s22 ultra and destroy the screen and regret it. am i worrying myself for nothing? i know that phone screens are definitely not indestructible. many bare phone screens have been broken from drops even if they were in a case.
it’s a sacrificial piece, it’s supposed to crack instead of letting the original glass panel break. Consider a piece of armor that’s so indestructible, the guy inside it turns into mush, completely destroyed by the impact while the armor container prevents all the guts and blood from spilling out. What’s the point, the armor destroys the very thing it’s supposed to protect.
It’s like cars.
Cars of old were tough and harder to dent, hence the force is directly transmitted to the passengers who turn into mush.
Cars today are easier to dent because they are specifically designed to absorb the impact and damage (crumple zones) so it won’t be transmitted to the passengers. The force is dispersed through the body of the car.