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The LG G2 is the beastly smartphone that is LG's answer to the Samsung Galaxy S4 and HTC One. It's a massive, yet not entirely unwieldy, smartphone brimming with specs that would make the most discerning geeks drool.
So
far, LG has been a distant cry from where Samsung and HTC find
themselves in terms of popularity and smartphone ownership. And between
the latter two, Samsung is really dominating the space.
Ratings in depth
With
the G2, it seems like LG took a lot of cues from its Korean counterpart
and built what many called a Galaxy S4 clone. It's large, made of lots
of plastic, shaped similarly and is jam-packed with more features than a
single person can handle.
During its New York City presentation,
we were a little baffled at what LG decided to highlight as the G2's
key features. The first and most evident is the placement of the power
button and volume control keys. LG
went to great lengths to explain how it was listening to customers and
observing their usage patterns. Somehow it all led to the awkward
placement of those buttons, along with a few other things the phone can
do.
In terms of price, the LG G2 still isn't launched in the UK -
but early SIM-free pricing suggests that it will instantly be comparable
with its competitors, coming in at under £500... perhaps as much as £20
under. Early
contract pricing is sparse, but it seems that the G2, with more power
than you can shake an S Pen at, will be no ore than a pound or two more
per month than its rivals that are nearly six months old now.
Can
the LG outgun and outsell the Galaxy S4 and HTC One? It'll be tough
without a massive marketing campaign, but let's take a look at how the
phone itself fares against its Android competitors.
Design
Diving right into what powers the LG G2
and makes it purr, you'll first notice a 5.2-inch 1920 x 1080 display,
which gives us a 424 PPI density. The chipset inside is a Qualcomm
MSM8974 Snapdragon 800, with a 2.26GHz quad-core Krait 400. In terms of
processing power, it seems that the G2 is in no short supply.
It comes in 16GB and 32GB variants, with 2GB RAM. Connectivity includes Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, NFC, Infrared port and 4G LTE. The
camera on back is a 13MP shooter with a small LED flash. Like other
high-end Android smartphones, it has a few tricks up its sleeves, too,
but we'll get into that in our camera section.
LG also made a big
deal out of the battery in this thing, which is a 3,000mAh Li-Po
(Lithium Polymer) battery. It's shaped in such a way that it takes up as
much space as it can in the phone.
To make more sense of it,
curved backs tend to create more unused space for flat batteries. If you
allow the battery to take advantage of the curvature of the phone, you
effectively get a slightly bigger battery.
Design
Despite
being a 5.2-inch display device, the LG G2 is very manageable in the
hand. It still takes a reach to get your thumb diagonally across the
screen, but it's not so huge that it becomes cumbersome.
To
undiscerning eyes, it can be quite hard to tell the difference - at
least on the face of it - between the G2 and the Samsung Galaxy S4. One
can argue that there is only so much you can do with the modern-day
smartphone form factor, but then again HTC and Motorola have very
distinct designs.
The edges of the device are clean, free of
volume controls and a power button. The bottom edge of the phone has a
3.5mm headset jack, micro-USB port and a speaker and microphone. The
G2's backside is the business end of the phone. LG decided to put the
volume buttons and power button just underneath the camera module.
LG
says its the reason the volume and power keys were placed on the back
is because that's where your finger naturally wants to rest when you're
talking on your phone, which we generally found to be true. It
can become awkward feeling around for the buttons, as In order to get
enough pressure onto the power button, you have to hold the G2 a little
awkwardly and make sure you get the correct leverage.
But the
South Korean brand has made a huge effort to mitigate this, with
elements like double knocking on the screen to open it up (which removes
the need to press the power button) and most apps have an onscreen
volume control to play with.
Plus over time we noticed ourselves
becoming increasingly OK with the placement of the keys - to the point
when we switched phones and found that we were pressing the camera
button to turn the phone on.
Aside from the power/volume buttons
and the camera module, the backside is emblazoned with carrier logos and
LG's branding. But otherwise, there isn't a whole lot more going on
back there. Up
front you won't find any physical buttons at all. The back, home and
menu buttons are all soft keys on the display, and will respond with
haptic feedback unless you disable it.
Overall, the design of the
LG G2 is nice, with the exception of the placement of the power and
volume buttons. And although we're not particularly fond of an
all-plastic body, it's not so bad here in this case.
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