![]() The screen offers vivid and bright colours alongside that high refresh rate that makes movement look flawless.Īside from a stunning display and performance beyond its price, handy features like a surprisingly reliable fingerprint scanner in the power button and battery life that’ll last you between just under a days use to a day and a half are present and correct here. Both browsing and gaming – as well as videos – are accommodated nicely by the impressive 1080p 120Hz display. Mobile games like Call of Duty Mobile runs comfortably too. Apps load almost instantaneously and you can bounce from one to the other with little care. ![]() For a phone under £300, there’s little more you can ask for when it comes to performance. The standout here is the Snapdragon 870 – Qualcomm’s latest mid-range processor. That’s the bad stuff out of the way and, thankfully, there’s plenty of good. Pros: Best-in-class camera 120Hz AMOLED display great speakers large battery Cons: No 5G no wireless charging: adverts in MIUI Admittedly, it doesn’t feel blazing fast but, at this price, it’s very capable. You’ll get a good amount of performance in everyday apps and it can even manage some gaming too. The Snapdragon 732G chip onboard is equally as functional. When you do run low, it has 33W fast charging – letting you go from 0 to 60 per cent in just over 30 minutes. This device has a mammoth 5,020mAh battery, meaning it should last you a day and change, even with that 120Hz on. The Redmi Note 10 Pro offers all the convenience that phone buyers are often looking for down at this price. At this price, you won’t be disappointed. The lack of optical image stabilisation means you’ll need to keep your phones steady but you can get some extremely impressive results. However, the point-and-shoot capabilities of this camera tell a different story. Those signs are here – with a humongous 108MP sensor onboard as well as a fairly needless macro camera. You can then spend those points on eco-minded causes.Īt this price it’s hard to fault the G60, though it does charge very slowly.Cameras at this low price point often get a bad rap for overinflated specs that ultimately lead to bad performance. ![]() You can buy the phone outright or you can get it from £12.50 per month with Nokia’s Circular subscription plan, which lets you upgrade when you want, or lets you accumulate points the longer you hold onto the same phone to encourage less e-waste. It’s good to see, and means you can use your phone knowing its Android security is up to date. Three years of software support is also above average for this price segment. With 5G, a large screen, great battery life and a perfectly capable main camera, the G60 ticks all our top boxes for a phone that doesn’t cost too much, considering. The Nokia G60 is an excellent budget phone choice at £200 (it’s not officially on sale in the US but you can get it via Amazon). It’s great to see the Nokia brand (the phones are actually made by Finnish company HMD) represent good value phones once more. Pair that with great battery life from the 5000mAh cell that we sometimes found reached the end of the day at 50% and you have a great cheap phone option. Triple cameras on the back of the Moto G62 exist, but it’s a push to call them all good – thankfully the 50Mp main sensor is very solid and will give you excellent daytime shots. If the performance occasionally stutters you will be able to forgive it for how attractive the software of this phone looks, and it’s a great alternative to Xiaomi’s cluttered UI, despite the strength of that brands budget phones. There’s a superb always-on display, despite having an LCD rather than OLED panel, that lets you quickly view and open notifications that no other phone brand has. This is one of the best budget phones you can get. What you gain with the Moto though is a solid plastic built quality that surpasses other phones at this price, a clean version of Android 12 with changes only made where Moto can improve, not add things for the sake of it. The cons of the Moto G62 are much the same as all cheap phones, because they are cheap! You save money by sacrificing performance, camera quality, and faster charging.
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