Sony's cheapest LTE smartphone - that is the Xperia E3 key selling point, but is it more to it than that? It has the same design language as the Sony Xperia Z3 and Z3 Compact so the trendy looks are also here and we have the latest Android KitKat decked out in Sony team colors.
The price point is always going to mandate some corner cutting but as Motorola's Moto G though us the overall experience doesn't necessarily need to be sub-par.
We can probably live with the not-quite-slim bezels, but we won't be able to forgive poor performance. Fortunately, the Snapdragon 400 inside the Xperia E3 has a good track record and the WVGA resolution shouldn't put too much strain on it.
Before we go any further, let's check the Sony Xperia E3 review cheat sheet.
Key features
- 4.5" IPS LCD, 480 x 854px, 218ppi, shatter-proof glass, ambient light sensor
- LTE connectivity
- Android 4.4.2 KitKat with Xperia UI on top
- Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 chipset with quad-core 1.2GHz Cortex-A7 processor, Adreno 305 GPU and 1GB of RAM
- 5MP camera, single LED flash, 1080p video recording
- VGA front-facing camera with video recording
- 4GB of built-in storage, expandable via the microSD card slot
- Active noise cancellation with a secondary microphone
- 2,330mAh battery; STAMINA Power Saving Mode
- Available in a variety of color options
Main disadvantages
- Low screen resolution
- Thick bezels make the device bigger than 4.5" peers
- Battery isn't user-replaceable
The Sony Xperia E3 is an improvement over its predecessor in every way possible, which is probably why Sony chose to skip E2 as a successor of the E1 - the two digit improvement was needed to underline the big jump forward.
Sony prides itself on the battery performance of the Xperia E3, the company says it could go a full two days thanks to its 2,330mAh battery and STAMINA mode optimizations. We're yet to test that claim out but it could potentially become a stand-out feature in a market where entry-level smartphones can barely make it through the day.
That, along with the premium on design, the LTE radio and the exclusive built-in software should help the Xperia E3 withstand the pressure from 720p screen-packing competition. While clinging close to stock Android, the Xperia E3 has the custom Xperia UI with the What's New panel, TrackID, Album, Walkman, Movies and Xperia Themes to name a few.
It isn't like us to deny a smartphone a fair hearing and the Xperia E3's trial begins after the break.
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