Neptune does NOT have the same gravity as Saturn.
If you weighed 100 units on Earth, you would weigh 106.4 units on Saturn and 114 units on Neptune.
The force of gravity on Neptune is greater than on Saturn.
Saturn has the second greatest mass, so it also has the second greatest gravity.
Neptune has much more mass than Earth with a mass of 17 times the mass of the Earth. Also, the diameter of Neptune is 3.8 times the diameter of Earth. This brings the gravity on Neptune up to 114% of the gravity of Earth.
gravity
Voyager 2 took 12 years to get to Neptune and it got there via gravity assist also known as the slingshot effect. It went past the orbit of mars onward to Jupiter, using its massive gravity to deflect the space craft towards Saturn. It used Saturn's gravitational pull to deflect itself towards Uranus and did the same thing with Uranus's gravity. Eventually it arrived at Neptune's orbit. It would probably take longer nowadays to do the same thing, because rockets are not built as efficiently as they were back then to get to where they wanted to go.
The surface gravity of Neptune is 1.14 times the gravity on Earth. This means that the effect is almost the same as here on Earth.
Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. All the outer planets.
neptune and Saturn
No. Saturn and Neptune are two different planets.
Saturn (at 120 megameters) is bigger than Neptune (at 49,500 km).
gas planet
Jupiter and Neptune are the only planets in our Solar System that have more gravity than the Earth. Jupiter's gravity is about 236% that of the Earth, and Neptune's gravity is about 112% that of the Earth. Edit: Because of uncertainties and different definitions you can get data that says Saturn and/or Uranus also have slightly stronger gravity than Earth's.