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HTC One

HTC One M8 review: Not worth it in 2018

Our Rating :
Price when reviewed : £530
inc VAT

Aside from the dual camera it's largely a by-the-numbers update, but the design alone is still enough to turn heads

The HTC One M8 is now four years old, and to be honest, it shows. Although the external design has aged beautifully, if you buy one today you’ll find the performance sluggish and the camera a disappointment. 

The follow-ups, fortunately, have all been solid improvements. While the HTC M9 was steady-as-she-goes, the HTC 10 was a great handset, and the U11 Plus was even better. Obviously the U11 Plus is the one to choose, given it has the same Qualcomm Snapdragon 835 chipset as the fastest phones around, but if your budget only goes so far, the HTC 10 remains a solid choice.

The original HTC One M8 review from 2014 continues below

HTC One M8 review: Design and build quality

It certainly still makes a striking first impression, and the One M8 is one of the few Android phones that can truly compete with Apple in terms of design. The M8 is almost 90% metal, with the few slivers of plastic left only being used to ensure the best possible reception for the internal antennae.

The curved back fits your hand comfortably and the brushed metal finish on our metal grey review unit glints in the light, making no mistake that the phone is made from metal rather than plastic. 

HTC One M8 review: Display

The HTC One M8 is slightly larger than the original HTC One, to make room for the bigger 5in LCD display. Both phones have the same 1,920 x 1,080 resolution, which means pixel density has dropped from 469ppi on the 4.7in original to 441ppi here, but in practice, it’s still impossible to see individual pixels.

The M8 looks incredibly sharp; even the tiniest of fonts are still legible and images are incredibly detailed. Image quality is fantastic, with natural colours and pure bright whites, along with impressively deep blacks for an LCD panel.

With a peak brightness of 491cd/m2 and an sRGB colour spectrum coverage of 93.7%, the M8 is among the best LCD screens we’ve seen in a smartphone, rivalling the iPhone 5s in terms of brightness and contrast.

HTC One (m8)

HTC One M8 review: Sound

HTC’s front-facing BoomSound speakers are a great match to the beautiful display, and make watching YouTube videos a joy; they are impressively loud, but also very clear, with no signs of distortion or clipping when pushed to their limits.

There’s even a small amount of bass, so you won’t instantly need to reach for a pair of headphones when someone sends you the latest viral video.

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HARDWARE
ProcessorQuad-core 2.3Ghz Qualcomm Snapdragon 801
RAM2GB
Screen size5in
Screen resolution1,920×1,080
Screen typeSuperLCD 3
Front camera5-megapixel
Rear camera4-Ultrapixel
FlashLED
GPSYes
CompassYes
Storage16/32GB
Memory card slot (supplied)MicroSD
Wi-Fi802.11ac
BluetoothBluetooth 4.0
NFCYes
Wireless data4G
Size146.4×70.6×9.4 mm
Weight160g
FEATURES
Operating systemAndroid 4.4 (KitKat)
Battery size2,600mAh
BUYING INFORMATION
WarrantyOne-Year RTB
Part codeOne (m8)

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HTC One
HTC One M7 (2013) review
Mobile phones

It might have been superced by the m8, but the HTC One M7 is still a beautiful handset with an amazing screen and innovative camera

£504 inc VAT