The ongoing US-Huawei dispute has cast some doubts on the future of the
Chinese company's smartphone business, giving many potential buyers of Huawei
and Honor-branded phones second thoughts. Still, braving these odds, Huawei
subsidiary Honor recently launched its new Honor 20 series of phones, including
the Honor 20 Pro, Honor 20, and Honor 20 Lite.
The Honor 20, which we have for review, is a premium phone. It has only slightly
downgraded camera hardware and a different design compared to its
flagship-grade sibling, the Honor 20 Pro. Barring that, the
Honor 20 is a high-end phone that packs a top-of-the-line SoC, quad rear
cameras, modern design with a hole-punch front snapper, and the feature-heavy
Magic UI 2.1 Android skin.
The Honor 20 falls squarely between the OnePlus 7₹ 32,999 (Review) and the OnePlus 7 Pro₹ 48,999(Review) in terms of
pricing. It will soon have to contend with the likes of the Asus ZenFone 6 (now known as
the Asus 6Z) and the Redmi K20 Pro for the coveted budget flagship crown in India. So, is the Honor
20 capable enough to fend off the competition and stand out? We find out in our
review.
Honor 20 design
The Honor 20 packs a 6.26-inch display, which is hard to believe given
the relatively compact form factor of the phone. The phone is really
comfortable to hold, and one-handed usage is not an issue either. Its slim
profile and curved edges ensure that it fits snugly in the palm.
Honor has gone for a dual-glass design, using a glass back with a mirror
finish that exhibits a strong gradient effect. We have the Honor 20's Sapphire
Blue variant for review, which is a bright blue shade with undertones of purple
that appear when light falls on it at different angles.
The aesthetics are definitely extravagant, but the whole design
is also unique and it would be tough to miss the Honor 20 even in the sea of
other phones flaunting gradient finishes. For people who are looking for a more
understated design, the Honor 20's Midnight Black variant might be more
appealing.
The glass
rear panel and the 2.5D curved-edge display blend seamlessly with the metallic
rim running around the edges of the phone. The right side features the volume
rocker and the power button with its embedded fingerprint sensor. It is flat
and slightly recessed, making it easy to locate.
The
buttons provide good tactile feedback on being pressed, but we found that the
power button on our unit was slightly loose. If you are worried about how easy
a side-mounted fingerprint scanner will be to use, you can rest easy as you
won't have any trouble reaching for it with either hand. It is worth mentioning
here that the Honor 20's fingerprint sensor is extremely quick and accurate,
unlocking the phone almost instantly.
On the
top, you'll find the secondary microphone and IR emitter, while the thin
earpiece is squeezed between the metallic frame and the display. The left side
has the dual-SIM tray, which can accommodate two Nano-SIM cards simultaneously.
Unfortunately, it is not of the hybrid type, and there isn't a third microSD
card slot either, which means storage is not expandable. The primary
microphone, speaker, and USB Type-C port are on the bottom.
Honor has
not cut any corners when it comes to Honor 20's build quality. The phone looks
and feels premium. The non-existent side and top bezels, and the very thin chin
make for a nearly all-screen design with a 91.7 percent screen-to-body ratio.
However,
the glossy finish of the rear panel makes fingerprint marks and smudges an
inevitability, and we had to clean them off every now and then to make the
Honor 20 look presentable. Then there is the huge camera bump on the back,
which prevents the phone from lying flat on a surface.
As far as box contents go, buyers will find the Honor 20 accompanied by
a SIM eject pin, USB Type-C cable, Huawei-branded SuperCharge adapter, USB
Type-C to 3.5mm adapter, and some paperwork.
Honor 20 specifications
As mentioned above, Honor 20 is chock full of high-end hardware. The
phone packs a 6.26-inch full-HD+ (1080 x 2340 pixels) display with a pixel
density of 412ppi. However, the company has not specified the peak brightness
numbers.
There's no reinforced glass, but Honor claims to have used a protective
material of its own to help prevent scratches and damage. The company says that
its latest offering is splash-resistant, although it does not have an IPxx
rating.
The phone is powered by Huawei's in-house HiSilicon Kirin 980 SoC, which
also powers flagships such as the Huawei Mate 20 Pro₹ 59,990 (Review) and the Huawei P30 Pro₹ 71,990 (Review). It is
manufactured using a 7nm process and packs four ARM Cortex-A76 cores, four
Cortex-A55 cores, dual Neural Processing Units, and the Mali G76-GPU. The Honor
20 also has 6GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage.
Another key highlight of the Honor 20 is its upgraded imaging hardware.
The phone packs four rear cameras, with the main snapper using a 48-megapixel
Sony IMX586 sensor and an f/1.8 aperture. It employs 4-in-1 Light Fusion —
Huawei's term for pixel binning — that combines four adjacent pixels into one
larger pixel which lets the camera capture more light for brighter photos at a
12-megapixel resolution.
It is accompanied by a 16-megapixel super-wide-angle camera with an
f/2.2 aperture and 117-degree field of view, a 2-megapixel depth camera with an
f/2.4 aperture, and a macro camera with the same aperture for capturing
close-up shots. On the front of this phone is a 32-megapixel selfie snapper
with an f/2.0 aperture.
The Honor 20 relies on a 3,750mAh battery with support for 22.5W fast charging. On the software side, the phone runs Magic UI 2.1 based on Android Pie. Our review unit, which was a test phone not running the final retail version of the software, was running the May security patch on top.
As for its features, Magic UI 2.1 feels a lot like EMUI, down to the
icon style and the arrangement of options in the Settings Menu. The phone comes
with a significant amount of bloatware, including both in-house and third-party
apps.
In addition to the usual suite of Google apps, you get in-house apps
called HiCare for customer service, App Gallery for downloading apps, Health
for recording data that can automatically sync with Google Fit, Honor Store,
Honor Club, and Tips, plus a host of utility apps like Weather, Recorder,
Backup, etc.
Some of the preinstalled apps are actually quite useful. For example,
the Downloads app collects all the files you download through the browser,
providing an easy way to find and manage them. Ride Mode and SOS are
implemented as individual apps, while the Optimizer app acts as a one-stop shop
to manage and clean internal storage, see your data usage patterns, control
battery usage, and a lot more.
The in-house apps didn't pester us with ads and notifications, but some
of the preinstalled third-party ones did. Talking about third-party apps, you
get Facebook, Fortnite Installer, Facebook Messenger,
Booking.com, Netflix, ShareChat, Hungama, PhonePe, and LinkedIn Lite. One app
named Like, which is a short-form video sharing platform like TikTok, started sending
us spammy notifications despite us not having opened it even once. We stopped
seeing them by revoking the app's notification sending permission.
You get Digital Balance, a feature that mimics Digital Wellbeing, and
allows you to monitor your phone usage statistics, set app time limits, and
assess screen time. There is also a feature called Bedtime, which turns the
screen grey and restricts access to user-specified apps to help prevent
distraction.
Magic UI 2.1 also offers a few unique gestures that require the use of
knuckles. For example, knocking on the screen twice with one knuckle takes a
screenshot, while doing so with two knuckles starts the screen-recording.
However, in our experience, the knuckle gesture for opening the split-screen
interface did not work most of the time.
Honor 20 performance, cameras, and
battery life
Before we talk about performance, let's talk about the display. The thin
bezels and the hole punch definitely give this phone a modern look, but you
might find the front camera's hole on the screen slightly distracting. As for
the display quality, it renders vibrant colours, and content on it looks crisp
and clear. Compared to an AMOLED panel, it looks a little less punchy. Also, we
found that the display is set to a slightly warm tone by default.
The viewing angles are good and the brightness is also decent. We did not have any major issues watching content and reading text on it, but the reflective nature of the screen was a little annoying. Under direct sunlight, watching videos or photos is not as easy on the eyes as we would like from a flagship.
Barring the aforementioned gripes, we found the Honor 20's display to be
just as good as that of any other high-end phone. You can choose between vivid
and normal colour modes, and also adjust the colour temperature to your liking.
There is an eye comfort mode that reduces blue light and imparts a yellowish
tinge to the display for a more comfortable reading experience. Users can
choose to activate it manually or set a custom schedule to enable it.
There is also a smart resolution feature that automatically reduces the
resolution from full-HD+ to HD+ to save power. You can even mask the hole-punch
with a black bar. In games with a lot of on-screen buttons such as PUBG Mobile,
we had to enable the black bar, as on-screen controls were overlapped by the
camera hole.
Coming to the performance of the Honor 20, the Kirin 980 is powerful enough
to run anything you throw at it. Be it heavy multi-tasking with 15-20 apps in
the background, the phone handled it all without a hitch. Even with heavy games
in the background, we barely saw any stutters when switching between apps.
Interestingly, the camera app occasionally became unresponsive for a few
seconds when taking photos. It appears that this issue is exclusive to the
camera app, as we did not come across any such problem with other in-house or
third-party apps.
The gaming experience on Honor 20 was good. We played PUBG Mobile, Asphalt 9, and Modern Combat 5 at high graphics settings, and they all ran buttery smooth. Our only complaint here is the single speaker, which is easy to muffle when playing games because of its placement.
The Honor
20 supports Huawei's Game Turbo 3.0 feature, which claims to boost gaming
performance by allocating system resources and optimising power consumption.
Honor tells us that Game Turbo 3.0 currently supports just over 30 games, both
high-end ones (such as PUBG Mobile, Fortnite, and Asphalt 9) as
well as casual titles (Candy Crush Saga and Angry Birds 2).
There are
two additional features in the settings — Game Acceleration for boosting gaming
performance and Uninterrupted Gaming, which blocks on-screen notifications and
silences alerts. We noticed that enabling Game Acceleration caused the phone to
heat up rapidly, with the upper rear getting particularly warm after around
30-40 minutes of gaming.
Audio
output is not too great. The peak volume is on the lower side, while bass
output also leaves a lot to be desired. Even at full volume, music lacks depth
and vocals sound synthetic and tinny.
Coming to
benchmarks, the Honor 20 scored 3,296 in Geekbench 4's single-core test and
9,593 in the multi-core test. In AnTutu, the phone put up a tally of 213,387
points, which is significantly lower than what current Snapdragon 855-powered
flagships are capable of delivering. 3DMark Sling Shot Extreme returned a score
of 2,070, while the phone achieved 38,028 in 3DMark Ice Storm Unlimited.
Now let's
dive deep into the phone's imaging chops. The company is betting big on the
Honor 20's camera prowess. The primary camera captures photos at 12 megapixels
by default, but one can manually switch to 48-megapixel mode to capture images
with more details.
Photos,
in general, turned out sharp and punchy, and looked good on the phone's screen.
There are a few major issues here, though. The photos are a little
oversaturated, and the colours of the objects look quite inaccurate. Some
people might actually prefer that added dash of colour and vibrancy, but
gradients and minor surface details are lost as a result.
We
noticed that in the case of close-up shots, even those taken at the
48-megapixel resolution, the colour profile was not accurate. Reds appear a tad
too warm and oversaturated, while greens look a little dull. Thankfully, edge
detection was mostly good.
Dynamic
range in photos is also below par. The camera failed to capture streaks of
colours in the sky during a sunset or sunrise, and was unable to replicate the
brilliant blues that can easily be captured by the likes of the Pixel 3₹ 56,840 (Review), Huawei P30 Pro (Review), and Samsung
Galaxy S10₹ 57,180(Review).
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