CREATIVE VIEWS #Huawei's new and most powerful android smartphone.

The Huawei Mate 20 Pro has gained a lot of attention since its launch and with good reason: it's a phone full of the latest technology, including Android's most powerful chip, a 3D face recognition system, and an exciting triple camera setup .
    But what if you can't use the Mate 20 Pro priced at the highest end of the market? Huawei has something else for you that still has the same powerful processor and mostly provides the same experience with some compromises: Enter Huawei Mate 20.

The Mate 20 is actually a slightly larger phone than the Pro. It features an Kirin 980, edge-to-edge design with a small tear on the Pro and a similar chip; It Skype on AMOLED screen and uses LCD display instead; It lacks 3D face recognition and an in-screen fingerprint scanner; And it does not have super fast 40-watt charging from Pro.
        So is it still worth the Mate 20 name and is it a phone worth buying? Read on to find out, but first, here it is…

What’s in the box:
  1. Mate 20 Smartphone.
  2. Most powerful charger of 2.5 waats.
  3. USB to USB-C type cable
  4. 3.5 mm jack earphone.
  5. User guide book.
  6. SIM ejector tool
    Design:

    Huawei Mate 20 Review
    Huawei Mate 20 Review
    Huawei Mate 20 Review
    Huawei Mate 20 Review
    Unlike the Mate 20 Pro, which features a futuristic in-screen fingerprint scanner, you have a traditional fingerprint reader on the Mate 20. It is located on the back of the phone and is lightning fast: a quick tap on the finger scanner and you are instantly transported to the phone's home screen.


    All physical buttons on the Mate 20 are on the right side of the phone: you have a power key and volume buttons above it. The buttons are made of metal, like the edge of the phone, and have a clicky feel, with a good amount of travel.


    Huawei's Mate 20 ships with its custom interface, on top of the latest Android 9 Pie in the 9.0 version known as its most sophisticated, Emission UI (or EMUI).

    EMUI is "affected" by iOS in many ways: from icons such as dialers, health, settings, calendars, and weather to gestures, swipe-downs for quick search shortcuts, and more. It really boggles the mind why companies still visually mimic Huawei's scale and size on such a large scale, but it remains the same, and functionally, the EMUI actually works quite smoothly. Does. Also, compared to earlier versions of EMUI, the path is now less cluttered, and Huawei has re-sent the required in-app button at the bottom of the screen for easy access.


    There is also no getting around the fact that the Mate 20 may not be the fastest to receive Android software updates in the future (if those updates come).

    The Mate 20 also features Huawei's new gesture navigation. The classic three-button Android Navy is still the default option, but you can switch to using gestures, and we can confirm that these work well. The following are the gestures: Swipe up from the bottom to go home, swipe up to see the multitasking card, and go back by swiping the sidewise from any edge of the screen. This is basically the iOS way of doing gestures, and it seems more logical than the slightly awkward native Android gestures on Google's Pixel phones. But there is a bit more stutter and recent shortcuts don't work as smoothly as we like.


    One thing we like on the Mate 20 is the dark mode in the interface that you enable by going to Settings> Battery> and here you turn on the "Dark Interface Colors" option. It is definitely easier on the eyes at night.

    Display:


    These days most high-end phones come with an AMOLED screen, but the Mate 20 is an exception here: it offers a larger, 6.5-inch LCD display with FHD + (1080 x 2244 pixels) resolution. Here are two notable things: First, the display's aspect ratio is 18.7: 9, a wider screen than the 19.5, display on the Pro. Having a wide screen also means that there is a much larger actual area, so you have more space for all your photos, videos and browsing needs.
    Huawei Mate 20 Review

    The other thing, of course. You can hide it through an option in the display settings, but it is actually so delicate and small that it is not a step that is necessary. Skype on the complex 3D face recognition system from the Mate 20 Pro which requires a lot of front camera components, and this is what makes the small rung possible. With this, the regular Mate 20 achieves an incredible screen-to-body ratio of 88.1%, even exceeding the already impressive 86.9% ratio on the Pro. The Mate 20 really feels like you're holding a giant screen with almost no bezels.


    The screen here is RGBW-like, meaning there is an additional white sub-pixel with red, white and green colors. This allows it to be very bright during the day. It also improves efficiency, as the screen needs to light only one subpixel instead of three for white output.

    Additionally, you have an Eye Comfort option for use at night (a blue light filter, in other words) and even a natural tone mode that automatically adjusts the white balance to the surrounding conditions so you Get more natural white shades.


    The conclusion:
    To sum it up perfectly, the Huawei Mate 20 is a large and powerful Android phone. It has incredible battery life, fast charging and a fast chip inside it. But you get an LCD screen that can be bright, but doesn't have the more impressive colors of the AMOLED one. The phone lacks some useful extras such as wireless charging. Notably, it may not quite match the rest of 2018's flag for camera performance. Unclear update status is another thief.

    Is it worth paying the full flagship cost for this one? If you value the incredible battery life, the answer to that is yes, certainly. But if you are looking for the very best screen and camera and a guarantee for updates, there are clearly better options out there.

    Huawei Mate 20 Review


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