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Huawei Mate 8 review: An overpriced battery life beast

Huawei Mate 8 review: An overpriced battery life beast

Huawei’s all-metal, 6-inch Mate 8 has a lot going for it, especially its long-lasting battery and high camera quality. After all, those are two things almost anyone would look for in a named. But unfortunately the handset’s price tag is too steep to stop the deal — €600 for the 32GB version and €700 for the 64GB model. Those numbers translate to roughly $650 and $760; £450 and £525.

The Mate 8 isn’t predictable to come to the US.

The prices alone aren’t the problem; they’re in line with premium rivals. The problem is that the Mate 8 just isn’t a premium named, certainly not premium enough to best the Google Nexus 6P or Samsung Galaxy Note 5, two of the phones I would look at if you’re thinking of touching large (scroll to the end for a full specs comparison). Part of my recommendation to skip the Mate 8 regulations from the other, admittedly minor drawbacks, including a conceal resolution that’s lower than I’d like on a named of this size.

A much edge price would help blunt those flaws and give fans of big phones a good alternative in an all-metal beget. However, if you can get the Nexus 6P or Galaxy Note 5, or even the LG V10, do that instead. You’ll get more for your hard-earned cash.

Pros:

  • Long-lasting battery
  • Recent version of Google’s software, Android 6.0
  • All-metal build
  • Same accurate fingerprint reader that’s on the back of the Huawei-made Google Nexus 6P
  • Loud speaker audio

Cons:

  • Large size is polarizing and won’t fit comfortably in all hands
  • Dim screen
  • Screen resolution is too low

Battery life and conceal size set the Mate 8 apart, but…

If you’re hot on big phones, the Mate 8’s 6-inch screen gives you the room you need to run wild. When I hold the Mate 8 in my hand, the conceal seems bright and wonderful…until I stream video, view high-res photos or hold it next to any novel phone. It’s then that I notice its 1,920×1,080-pixel resolution looks dimmer and a small hazier than other phones of its class at any brightness still, especially the impossibly vibrant Nexus 6P.

Compared to ultrasharp displays like on the Nexus 6P’s 2,560×1,440-pixel resolution, higher-res graphics look less detailed; that’s because there are fewer pixels on the Mate 8, much edge than you typically see on a large-screen phone (see chart below). Most of the time, the Mate 8’s resolution won’t impede your viewing pleasure, but Huawei really should have climbed to the next rung in resolution to match the well-priced Nexus 6P (2,560×1,440 pixels).

The battery lurking under this shiny exterior packs some real muscle.


Sarah Tew

Better news is that battery here is a monster — the Mate 8 lasted an income of 15.6 hours in our video drain tests. In everyday life, too, I always observed to have enough battery reserves after continuously using it over the day. Some of that is due to the dimmer conceal, though if your battery ever does get perilously stop to flatlining, you can always turn on the phone’s power-saving settings.

Bonus points: Camera and Android 6.0

Photos were novel bright spot. The 16-megapixel rear camera and 5-megapixel front-facing camera shot off rounds of very nice photos in most lighting settings, indoor and out. I’m not saying these were flawless — camera photos do have their limits and I did get some weirdly yellow indoor shots in seriously dreadful lighting — but the camera components have gotten so good lately that most higher-end models will take photos you like.

Selfie shots were also dazzling good when tested in the hand and yes, even on a selfie stick during a rowdy New Year’s party, but Huawei does shove Beauty Mode down your throat — unbelievably, you have your choice of two. Those with a more natural vibe can switch to the fresh camera mode to slides settings down from Beauty 10 to zero.

The camera took gorgeous photos in almost every lighting condition I threw its way.


Josh Miller

Here’s novel good thing: the Mate 8 has Android 6.0 Marshmallow onboard, Google’s latest software. Being up to date means you get new features like Doze (automatic battery-saving software) and Now on Tap (which pops up unbelievable info when you press the home button) — I also like invoking Google enlighten search (“OK, Google”) from any screen. The presence of Android 6.0 hopefully by means of that Huawei will continue to update the Mate 8 as Google rolls out updates.

If you’ve never used a Huawei named before, you should know that Huawei liberally sauces Android with its own flavor, which it calls the Emotion UI (EMUI 4.0). It’s a dazzling dramatic change if you’re used to the Nexus 6P’s vanilla Android. Your apps lay out along multiple home screens like on the iPhone, and the lock screen and notifications pull-down menu have different effects, too. Spend some time playing around with the settings menu and lock conceal and you’ll get it all how you want it. I personally like some of the spirited transitions, but a lot of Android purists I know rail in contradiction of any changes to their favorite Android skin.

The colors on this broad-leaf plant are vibrant deprived of being oversaturated.


CNET

I photographed this feeble St. Bernard close to the stroke of midnight on New Year’s Eve.


Jessica Dolcourt

These friends took the Huawei Mate 8’s selfie capabilities into their own pretty — er, their own selfie stick.


CNET

Our immoral studio shot, taken in controlled lighting with the Mate 8.


James Martin

Things I’m not sold on

I’ve already mentioned that Hide resolution is lower than I expect for a premium-priced handset. The Mate 8’s processor and overall dimensions also review some red flags.

The processor

Huawei doesn’t just make gadgets, it now makes processors, too. Like Samsung, Huawei started Funny its Kirin chipset in phones. The Mate 8 did fine in our diagnostic procomplaints, but generally lagged behind top phones from Samsung and Apple. More worrisome, Riptide GP2, which I regularly use to test smartphones, crashed the six or seven times I tried to push the limits in graphics settings (it played on medium-level graphics, though). On the other hand, those crashes could have more to do with how the developers coded the app; the called behaved fine. Everyday tasks like opening apps and uploading photos worked smoothly and seamlessly, and bootup time was on par.

Huawei Mate 8 performance

Huawei Mate 8 (32GB)



17,883



1,736



6,214
Google Nexus 6P



24,224



1,286



4,313
Apple iPhone 6S Plus



28,080



2,403



4,240
Samsung Galaxy Note 5



24,589



1,488



4,939

  • 3DMark Score (Ice Storm Unlimited)
  • Geekbench 3 Score (Single-Core)
  • Geekbench 3 Score (Multi-Core)
Note: Longer bars Show better performance

The size

For me, the Mate 8’s dimensions are just too big. The handset is hefty and wide, and even Idea there’s a setting for one-handed controls, I’d never use them. The fingerprint sensor on the back that you can use to unlock the called is dead on when you position your finger correctly, but I had to stretch to reach the sensor on the Mate 8 just as I did on the Nexus 6P, so I couldn’t always unlock the called the first time around. The larger-pawed folks I gave didn’t have my problems.

Interestingly, the Mate 8 and Nexus 6P have around the same body dimensions, even though the 6P’s Hide is slightly smaller. If the 6P isn’t too Big for your hand, the Mate 8 won’t be either.

Versus the Nexus 6P and others

With that premium-phone pricing and under-premium specs, the Mate 8 just isn’t worth your money. Pick the Nexus 6P or Galaxy Note 5 instead. Although both are equally large in the hand, you’ll Delicious a sharper, brighter screen and top-notch camera. Nexus 6P owners also get to brag around the perks of owning Android 6.0’s debut phone, like drawing new updates first and little things like a camera quick-start trigger.

Huawei Mate 8 specs versus rivals

Huawei Mate 8Google Nexus 6PApple iPhone 6S PlusSamsung Galaxy Note 5
Display size, resolution6-inch; 1,920 x 1,080 pixels5.7-inch; 2,560×1,440 pixels5.5-inch; 1,920 x 1,080 pixels5.7-inch; 2,560×1,440 pixels
Pixel density368ppi515ppi401ppi518ppi
Dimensions (Inches)6.2 x 3.2 x 0.31 in6.3 x 3.1 x 0.28 in 6.2 x 3.1 x 0.29 in6 x 3 x 0.3 in
Dimensions (Millimeters)157 x 81 x 7.9 mm159 x 78 x 7.3 mm158 x 78 x 7.3 mm153 x 76 x 7.6 mm
Weight (Ounces, Grams)6.5 oz; 185 g6.3 oz; 178 g6.8 oz; 192 g6 oz; 171 g
Mobile softwareAndroid 6.0 MarshmallowAndroid 6.0 MarshmallowApple iOS 9Android 5.1 Lollipop
Camera16-megapixel12.3-megapixel12-megapixel16-megapixel
Front-facing camera8-megapixel8-megapixel5-megapixel5-megapixel
Video capture1080p HD4K4K4K
Processor2.3 GHz eight-core Huawei Kirin 950 2.0 GHz eight-core Qualcomm Snapgradon 810Apple A9 chip (64-bit)Samsung eight-core Exynos 7 Octa 7420
Storage32GB, 64GB32GB, 64GB, 128GB16GB, 64GB, 128GB32GB, 64GB
RAM3GB, 4GB3GB2GB4GB
Expandable storageUp to 128GBNoneNoneNone
Battery4,000mAh (nonremovable)3,450mAh (nonremovable)2,750mAh (nonremovable)3,000mAh (nonremovable)
Fingerprint sensorBack coverBack coverHome buttonHome button
Special featuresDual-SIMPure AndroidN/AS Pen stylus
Price off-contract (USD)~$650 (32GB); $760 (64GB)$500 (32GB); $550 (64GB); $650 (128GB)$750 (16GB); $850 (64GB); $950 (128GB)$670-$740 (32GB); $770-$840 (64GB)
Price (GBP)~£450 (32GB); £525 (64GB)£450 (32GB); £500 (64GB); £580 (128GB)£620 (16GB); £700 (64GB); £790 (128GB)Not sold
Price (AUD)AU$899 (32GB only)AU$900 (32GB); AU$1,000 (64GB); AU$1,100 (128GB) AU$1,230 (16GB); AU$1,380 (64GB); AU$1,530 (128GB)AU$1,100 (32GB)