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Fancy a game of PUBG Mobile? You’ll be waiting for it to load, and even with Huawei’s software tweaks under the hood, it doesn’t feel quite as responsive as it does on faster hardware. It’s the properly demanding stuff where things stick out. With only 4GB of RAM on board, multitasking could take a hit if you’re constantly diving between apps. Look very closely and you’ll spot transitions that aren’t quite as slick, and you’ll be waiting a split second longer for more intense apps to kick in than you would on a more expensive phone. Apps load quickly, there’s little in the way of stutter or slowdown, and most games run well too. What matters is real world performance, and for the most part, the Mate 20 Lite gets the job done just fine. It’s on par with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 710, but with so few phones using that chip here in the UK, a better comparison would be the Snapdragon 660-powered Nokia 7 Plus.įorget about that though.
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It’s an octa-core chip, but not nearly as efficient or as fast as the Kirin 970 found in the P20 Pro flagship. On paper, the Mate 20 Lite ‘makes do’ with a mid-range Kirin 710 CPU. If you’re only looking to take basic photos, you won’t use half of these features – but they’re handy for anyone that likes to get creative.
The camera app is comprehensive, with dedicated portrait and aperture modes for blurring backgrounds, AR selfies that use face recognition, and the usual selection of stickers, beauty filters and effects that have become the norm for Huawei phones. We’re still talking about a smartphone, of course, so you shouldn’t expect photographic miracles once the sun sets.
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The shutter speed doesn’t have to drop so dramatically, so your shots look that little bit cleaner and free from blur. Low light performance is a step above the Honor Play, however, thanks to an f/1.8 aperture. I’m not convinced the extra pixel count makes photos look dramatically better than the 16MP Honor Play.īoth process pictures in a similar way, so you’d only spot the difference with your nose up against the screen. Trees in particular look oversharpened in order to boost perceived detail, and the effect isn’t always pleasant. Zoom in, or look for more intricate detail and you’ll see the limitations of the (supposedly AI-powered) processing, though. Shots are exposed naturally, and major detail is captured clearly. Colours are largely well-judged, only veering towards oversaturation on a few occasions. Not a great start.įeed it enough light, though, and the phone can take respectable photos. Jagged edges and immaculate blur are all too easy to spot. If the bokeh blur they help create was accurate, this would be fine, but some of the Mate’s portrait photos look like their backgrounds were blurred in Microsoft Paint. Trouble is, at 2MP each, they’re just there for depth-sensing. They’ve each got secondary snappers backing them up, too. 20MP on the back, 24MP on the front? That’s a lot of pixels. With no Leica logo underneath it’s two rear lenses, it doesn’t take a genius to work out the Mate 10 Lite isn’t rocking the best camera tech Huawei has to offer. It’s all too easy to block it with your palm, but let it sing free and your u won’t be instantly reaching for a pair of headphones. The single speaker at the bottom of the phone gets the job done, too. There’s nothing here that disappoints for the cash – but nothing that really surprises either. Brightness is ample for getting a clear image outdoors, though. Viewing angles are decent enough, but colours start to shift when you stray too far from face-on. You can hide it completely through the Settings menu, too.
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The notch isn’t all that obtrusive, with apps automatically stealthing it through software when you view anything in full screen. Definition only goes so far, and blacks are a weakness of the display tech. It’s a fairly colourful screen, with decent contrast and clarity, but don’t go expecting picture quality that’ll shame your 4K telly. I’d guess the panel is the same as the one found in the Honor Play, as the specs and size are identical. Huawei has stayed sensible with the specs, using an LCD panel and 2340×1080 resolution to keep costs down, and to avoid sapping too much battery. A year or two ago, you’d be lucky to get a 5in screen from your midrange blower – here, you’re getting a 6.3in slab with slim bezels and that most 2018 of features, a notch.