- Excellent performance as in the entire line of Google phones, and excellent ergonomics - the size is very convenient, similar to the Pixel 3, but in the same dimensions, the engineers fit a larger frameless display, and by the way, AMOLED. The molded polycarbonate body feels great in the hand and leaves no marks. Just excellent autonomy and, as always, the best cameras. As well as amazingly high-quality stereo sound, and a vibration sensor like the flagships. Another worth noting is the traditionally fast and accurate fingerprint scanner. Well, with such a budget - 128Gb (UFS 2.1) is also a definite plus. Support eSim (two sim cards). For lovers of wired sound, 3.5mm Jack was retained in budget Pixels.) A separate story is the native support of Google. The latest Android 11 on the day of the premiere, even arrived on the family Pixel 2 XL. So the support is impeccable.
- Objectively, it is difficult to come up with something directly from the shortcomings. Well, maybe not the best color calibration of the display, and I also lack compressible edges, I'm used to them. But that's more of a quibble.
- Compact size
- - glass is scratched - unreliable
- Clean and fast android, latest ated and features. Built-in Google camera lens. Nice tactile feedback. Fast and accurate (even with wet hands) fingerprint scanner.
- Mediocre mobile internet. The sound in the headphones is worse than in the previous smartphone (Meizu 16X). The speaker that is used here for stereo when watching a video at high volume vibrates, crackles and chokes.
- Camera. Pure Android. The battery is enough. Not a shovel.
- Haven't found it yet.