Honor 6X review: A dual-camera Moto G4 Plus adversary

With fantastic performance at a great price, Honor’s 6X shouldn’t be ignored
Written By
Published on 18 January 2017
Our rating
Reviewed price £225 inc VAT
Pros
  • Great dual-camera on a budget
  • A great performer
  • Long-lasting battery life
Cons
  • Disappointing display

Im sure Honor doesnt like to be pigeonholed as a “budget” smartphone brand but the fact remains that its good at making them, and its latest the Honor 6X might just be its best smartphone so far.

Its design is hardly revolutionary, but for the most part it’s pretty nice. There’s a decently sized Full HD 5.5in LCD screen squeezed into an all-metal body with 32GB of on-board storage and 3GB of RAM, with a choice of three distinct colours: silver, grey and gold are on the cards and, refreshingly, no needlessly flamboyant names in sight.

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Its rear is curved, which doesnt play well with your flat desk, but sits nicely in your hand and while the screen isnt curved like the Samsungs S7 Edge it does slightly taper at the edges, which is nice. This isnt going to blow anyones minds but its far from vomit-inducing either.

As for connectivity, the phone has a dual SIM slot, handy for the tech journo who travels abroad and wants to use a local SIM. Theres no USB Type-C connector for fast charging, though, with the Honor 6X instead relying on that old-school method of micro-USB charging. A fingerprint reader is nicely nestled at the back below its twin-lens camera (more on which later). This is easy to grab and is easily the fastest Ive ever used to unlock a smartphone.

The Honor 6Xs screen itself isn’t AMOLED, but instead a good-quality LCD unit. It measures pretty well, too, with a contrast ratio of 1,694:1 helping it produce wonderfully impactful images. And with a peak brightness of 502cd/m2 youll only likely have problems reading it in the very brightest of conditions.

Its colour reproduction isnt quite so good, unfortunately. The screen covers only 89% of the sRGB colour gamut, which is far from brilliant. However, thanks to Honors new “eye comfort mode” which filters out blue light in the evenings, and automatically adjusts brightness and colour temperature according to ambient light, it is easy on your eyes.

The dual-camera is good and the Honor 6X is the only phone Ive seen in this price bracket to include twin cameras, in this case a 12-megapixel unit and a 2-megapixel secondary sensor, allowing it to take wide-aperture shots similar to the iPhone 7 Plus Bokeh mode, blurring everything beyond the point of focus. 

Honor 6X UK SIM-Free Smartphone - Grey

Honor 6X UK SIM-Free Smartphone – Grey

The effect isnt quite on par with Apples plus-sized handset (which at nearly triple the price is as youd expect), but it’s still good enough to give your shots a handy facelift.

Theres also the usual suite of shooting modes, with the rear camera producing some decent shots, packed with detail. In our test shot below, it captures the brickwork on those neighbouring buildings particularly well.

Indoors, image quality isnt quite so good. Photographs look a touch grainy, and lack in vibrancy (take a look at those dull-looking pens), but for the most part the Honor 6X produces balanced, well-judged exposures in low light, and has a single LED flash to help cut through the darkness when conditions get really tricky.

Critically, the Honor 6Xs snapper beats the similarly priced Huawei P9 Lite by a country mile in our outdoor camera tests. The green roof of the pub in the test shot below are well-defined with plenty of detail, and reflections in the puddles on the roof are picked up nicely. The HDR mode didnt seem to bring much to the table, although I doubt the gloomy overcast day did anything to help.

However, if you do feel the need to tweak your images, you do get both Pro still and video modes for fine-grained control over every aspect of your images, allowing you to tinker with ISO and exposure values to your hearts content.

Despite the price, the Honor 6X is no slouch in everyday use. Theres a 2.1GHz Kirin 655 octa-core processor inside, joining forces with 4GB of RAM. With a GeekBench single core score of 784 and 3,319 for multi-core, the 6X is more or less a carbon-copy of Huaweis latest P9 Lite.

What this boils down to is a smooth and responsive experience in general, and surprisingly stable multitasking. Honor says its smart file system (HTCs 10 Evo has a similar facility) reduces file fragmentation for faster response times and it certainly feels that way.

Its a great performer once you crack open some Android games, too. It scored an average frame rate of 8.4fps in the GFXBench Manhattan 3 test, which is perfectly respectable for a budget phone, and the likes of Threes! and Angry Birds 2 ran without a hitch.

Battery life is less impressive but its big at 3,340mAh in size and it didnt do too badly in our test, lasting 11hrs 18mins while playing back video continuously in flight mode. For context, thats roughly an hour longer than 2016s 5X, although it lags behind the current king of budget smartphones the Moto G4 Plus which lasted more than two hours longer.

It wouldnt be an Android phone without a bit of overlay tinkering and the Honor 6X is no exception. Usually, this is the point at which we castigate Honor for insisting on preloading its own onerous launcher software, but Honor’s EMUI is nowhere near as bad as it used to be.

And while theres still quite a bit of superfluous pre-installed software a handful of naff games and unnecessary apps you can at least get rid of them. The downside is that the Honor 6X doesn’t ship with Android 7 Nougat, but Honor is promising an OTA update in the coming months. Watch this space.

This price bracket is chock full of budget smartphones well worth considering, but the Honor 6X stands above most of them. Its design, camera quality and performance are great for the money, and battery life isnt bad either.

The Moto G4 and G4 Plus deliver more bang for your buck and have better battery life and a more-pleasant-to-use camera. But Ill freely admit Im shallow when it comes to smartphones, and prefer the Honor for its fancier design and that dual-lens camera.

But whats really impressive about the Honor 6X is that it holds firm against smartphones that cost twice (and in some cases three) times as much as its £225 asking price. In short, Honor has created a fantastically capable budget smartphone in the 6X at a very tempting price, and its impossible not to recommend it.

Honor 6X UK SIM-Free Smartphone - Grey

Honor 6X UK SIM-Free Smartphone – Grey

Written by

Deputy editor at Expert Reviews, Nathan joined the website back in 2016. Kicking off his journalism career as a laptop reviewer, he swiftly became Expert Reviews' smartphone expert, testing and reviewing hundreds of handsets over the years. Nathan is an NCTJ-accredited journalist and regularly attends key industry events and product launches around the world, including the MWC and IFA trade shows.

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