Even on a day when I travelled for 8 hours or more, listening to music on the journey, and it was constantly hunting for the next mast to hook on to for signal, it more than made it through the full day. It was a delayed, slightly buzzy feel, and that detracted a little from the otherwise premium experience.īattery life is strong enough and - based on performance for me - it's more than enough to deliver a full day's usage from even the heaviest of users. It didn't have that tight, haptic motor feeling I'm used to feeling on expensive Android phones, or the iPhone 14 Pro for that matter. The only minor quirk with performance that I found was that there was sometimes this feeling that when typing or interacting with the screen, the vibration feedback from the phone wasn't particularly instant, or subtle. There is a benefit to it, in that there's a physical reassurance when you touch it or press it, but I've found many times that it regularly picks up accidental touches and either unlocks when I don't want it to or registered failed attempts at unlocking when the wrong part of my hand touches it. There's a physical fingerprint sensor on the side of the phone, instead of an in-display one, which - in 2023 - seems an unusual choice in a phone that costs comfortably north of $1000. That SIM tray, by the way, can be removed without a SIM tool, just use your fingers - another win for practicality. Both features that Samsung and Apple have long given up on in their more expensive phone models. There's a 3.5mm audio port in the top edge - which sets it apart from pretty much any other flagship phone - it also includes a microSD card slot in the SIM tray so that you can expand the storage if you want to. Otherwise, a lot of its physical characteristics are similar to what we've seen from Sony flagships for the past few years.
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