Bearing in mind that this is a sub-£50 4G phone, this is a pretty remarkable.
Of course, nothing on it is flagship grade (despite it trying to look so much like an iPhone Pro), and it would be grossly unfair to review it as such, so instead I shall simply try to describe what you can expect.
Starting with the box, inside which you will get the phone, a charging cable, a sim-ejection tool, a clear TPU case, and a screen protector.
Picking it up, you have a very dinky device that is doing it's best to look like a mini-iphone; the power is on the right, volume buttons on the left.
Turning it on, it boots into an iOS themed version of Android, complete with iOS symbols. In fact, it is so iOS that it doesn't have a home page and an app drawer; it does the iOS thing of just having your apps on the homepage.
The screen has top and bottom bezels like the old iphones with the home button. The screen is fine; it has very good viewing angles, so I think it must be an IPS panel. It gets bright enough, and, while not the most colourful, it's fine.
Once it has booted, it is perfectly responsive and easy to use while moving about the operating system. This was the aspect I was most surprised about, as the processor is usually the main budget item in budget phones. No, I've not tried gaming, and I'm not going to – don't be silly. Also, 3 inch screen….
The camera is…there. Only one of the 3 rear 'cameras' is real. Looking at the metadata from a shot I took, it is is f 2.8 lens, outputting 1920×2560 images, which come out at a surprisingly large 2.5Mb (ish) each. There are 13 scene modes, but you have to go up into the settings cog to get to them. Even with good lighting there is a lot of noise and sharpening visible. To be honest; the camera is not great, but is better than not having a camera, and it's not terrible.
Video is much the same; it shoots in 1280×720 at 28fps in 3gp. There is no stabilisation. However, the image is bright and colourful, and for a sub-£50 phone, it's very good.
The single speaker is in the earpiece and is fine; you can listen to music on it, but you probably shouldn't as it lacks any bass. However, for YT, calls, etc, it's fine.
There is a double sim card slot (and presumably no e-sim). I was surprised to discover (the listing page didn't mention this) that one of the slots can take a micro-SD card, allowing a significant increase in the amount of memory for media, and even large apps, so I'm pleasantly surprised. Without a sim card, the phone has 11GB unused storage.
Although it is running Android 9, it has many of the more recent features, such as nearby share (which it still calls 'quickshare'), Digital Wellbeing, night light, and so on, so it would feel familiar to anyone used to Android.
Battery life is hard to quantify; it should be ok for about a day, but it will die within 2 days, even if left on standby. Charging is not 'high speed', but because the battery is small it doesn't take long anyway.
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