Sony Xperia XZs review: Specification

Published on by Wiro Sableng

Sony took the wraps off of two fresh high-end smartphones in this season's MWC. Even though the Xperia XZ Premium deservedly gained all the focus, the firm also unveiled the successor of this Xperia XZ, that had been their 2016 flagship. The newest flagship, dubbed the Xperia XZs, attributes just mild updates when compared to the predecessor, but are these changes enough to create this device more notable? Find out in our Sony Xperia XZs review!

There are just a few changes together with the Xperia XZs in comparison with its predecessor, but none as far as the look or build quality are involved. Like the Xperia XZ before it, this device features what Sony calls a loop structure, detailed with sides which can be curved and taper towards the front and back, allowing for an in-hand feel that's comfortable in front. The Xperia XZs' loop design also comes with a level top and bottom on which the device will stand.

The XZs also will come with a metal plate in the rear, plastic along the sides, and also glass up front. The headset jack and USB Type-C port have reached the top and underside, and also the power button, volume rocker, and also a passionate shutter camera shutter button are all entirely on the perfect side. Sony has ever been known to develop impressively-designed tablets, however it needs to be mentioned that in a universe where we have been increasingly moving towards nearby bezel-less layouts, the top and bottom chin over the Xperia XZs could be particularly glaring into a your own.

The Xperia XZs additionally retains the 5.2-inch IPS LCD display, with a Full HD resolution resulting in a pixel density of 424 ppi. Not surprisingly, the screen is vibrant and sharp, provides excellent viewing angles, color manipulation is good and does not look overly oversaturated, and the brightness is also good enough for comfortable viewing out doors. The 1080p resolution a lot more than simply gets the work done here, and unless you're likely to make use of this apparatus for VR, then you aren't going to miss Quad HD.

The first difference between the initial Xperia XZ and the Xperia XZs is available from the performance section, but even that isn't especially significant. The Xperia XZs includes exactly the identical processing package as its predecessor, including the Qualcomm Snapdragon 820 chip backed by the Adreno 530 GPU, but the RAM was bumped up from 3 GB to 4 GB.

The Snapdragon 820 chip may well not be the most current and biggest anymore, but is more than capable of tackling even processor-intensive tasks. There have undoubtedly been no problems with lag or lost frames when launching apps, browsing the internet, or playing games, and multitasking and using more programs running at the background has just improved with the access to another gigabyte of RAM.

32 GB and 64 GB will be the built-in storage alternatives available, however if that is not enough for you personally, expandable storage via microSD card is likely for an additional 256 GB. Based on the current market, a dual sim form of the unit can be offered.

Published on Sony

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