Vivo enjoyed a good run with the X-series in 2015 and even snatched the world's slimmest phone title with the local Chinese version of the X5Max. In 2016, the company is obviously trying to carry that momentum into the midrange with the V-series.
The company has made a name for collecting great ideas from rival manufacturers and putting a spin of its own to them. The V3Max is no different but now that Vivo already rings a bell globally, perhaps it's about time it stopped looking around for inspiration and played to its own strengths.
Having said that, the Vivo V3Max is hardly a risk taker. It bets heavily on the exterior it seems, like every other Vivo phone, and has more than reasonable specs for the price.
Speaking of which, here are the phone's key features.
Vivo V3Max key features:
- 5.5" 1080p IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 401ppi
- Metallic body with sand-blasted anodized aluminum alloy back cover
- Qualcomm MSM8976 Snapdragon 652 chipset; octa-core CPU (quad-core 1.8GHz Cortex-A72 CPU and quad-core 1.4GHz Cortex-A53), Adreno 510 GPU, 4GB of RAM
- 13MP phase-detection autofocus camera, f/2.0 lens, single-LED flash; HDR, Panorama, Night, Pro mode, 1080@30fps, 1/4x slow motion video recording, 10x timelapse
- 8MP front camera, f/2.4, 1080p video recording
- 32GB built-in storage
- Hybrid Dual SIM/microSD slot
- Android Lollipop 5.1 skinned with FunTouch OS 2.5
- Cat. 4 LTE (150/50Mbps); dual-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n; Bluetooth 4.1; GPS, GLONASS, Beidou; microUSB, FM radio
- 3,000mAh battery
- Fingerprint reader
- Standard 3.5mm headphone jack, powered by a Hi-Fi-grade 32-bit/192kHz DAC
Main disadvantages:
- Derivative design
- Not the most recent version of Android
- Only a single color option available (Gold)
- Limited regional availability
The Vivo comes across as quite adequately equipped and even though its design isn't brand new, it has e distinct premium feel and the usual solid build. The Snapdragon 652 is quite capable in combination with the Adreno 405 GPU. The camera setup looks like a decent package too, with a 13MP rear unit with a f/2.0 aperture. Vivo has a thing for this sensor and it did quite well for them in previous phones.
Where things take a weird turn is the software department. The V3Max runs Android 5.1 (step it up to Marshmallow already, Vivo!) with the heavily customized FunTouch OS. The skin has a definite Apple feel to it and could be a deal breaker for die-hard Android fans.
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