To help us provide you with free impartial advice, we may earn a commission if you buy through links on our site. Learn more

Samsung Galaxy A3 (2016) review: The S6 Mini in disguise

Samsung Galaxy A3 2016
Our Rating :
£69.99 from
Price when reviewed : £269
inc VAT (as of 29th of April)

It's expensive, but the tiny Galaxy A3 2016 beats every other mid-range smartphone when it comes to looks and battery life

Specifications

Processor: Quad-core 1.5GHz Exynos Octa 7580, Screen Size: 4.7in, Screen resolution: 1,280×720, Rear camera: 13 megapixels, Storage (free): 16GB (11GB), Wireless data: 3G, 4G, Size: 135x65x7.3mm, Weight: 132g, Operating system: Android 5.1.1  Buy Now from Mobilefun

[/vc_column_text][/vc_column][/vc_row]

Battery Life

The A3 pulls it back when it comes to battery life, though, as it lasted a very impressive 14h 48m in our continuous video playback test with the screen set to our usual brightness setting of 170cd/m2. This is one of the best battery lives I’ve seen from a mid-range handset, as it beats the OnePlus X by almost two hours. It’s also nearly four hours more than the OnePlus 2, making the 2016 A3 more reliable over the course of a day.

Display

Its impressive stamina is partly thanks to a 4.7in, 1,280×720 Super AMOLED display, which is more energy efficient than traditional LCD panels. As with all of Samsung’s Super AMOLED screens, each pixel is individually backlit, which means there’s essentially no power drain when they’re displaying black. It arguably produces better-looking images than typiacl LCDs, as blacks are truly pitch perfect at 0.00cd/m2 and its colour reproduction stretches across the whole 100% of the sRGB colour space. Contrast is also absurdly high on the A3, which allows plenty of detail to shine through in darker shadow areas.

It all makes for a beautiful display, and it really makes the A3 stand out compared to other mid-range phones with LCD displays. Admittedly, the A3 isn’t quite as bright as other LCD screens, though my measurement of 410cd/m2 is still much higher than what I’d normally expect to see from this kind of panel. Sadly, it doesn’t have any kind of dynamic outdoor brightness mode that pushes it beyond this figure like the Galaxy S7, but even 410cd/m2 is still perfectly usable outside.

Camera

Samsung Galaxy A3 2016 camera test

Samsung Galaxy A3 2016 camera test HDR

Samsung Galaxy A3 2016 camera test indoorsYou won’t be disappointed with the A3 2016’s 13-megapixel camera, either. While detail levels tend to veer off towards the corners of the frame, it still produced bright, vibrant images when shooting outdoors, and almost everything looked sharp and crisp. The sky was a little overexposed when shooting in Auto mode, but switching to HDR quickly sorted this out, bringing back plenty of contrast and cloud shadow detail.

Indoors, the A3 can sometimes struggle to bring everything in focus, so you’ll need to be patient with its rather lethargic autofocus speed. However, you should still be able to produce some decent shots in low light, as evidenced by my test shots below. With no additional lighting, our still life arrangement was a little soft in places, but colours still looked natural and there was hardly any noise present whatsoever.

Things improved dramatically when I turned on the flash or our external studio lights, though, so you’ll want to make sure you have as much natural light as possible in order to produce the best pictures. In these circumstances, there was a lot more detail and contrast on show, and every object was that much sharper round the edge.

Conclusion

When you come down to cold, hard numbers, there’s no denying the OnePlus X is better value for money overall. While I’m not a great fan of the X’s overly-textured and rather scratchy metal frame, the draw of Cyanogen OS (which looks identical to vanilla Android) and a 5in, Full HD AMOLED display is hard to resist, particularly if, like me, you’re not a great fan of Samsung’s TouchWiz interface.

That said, if you’re not really bothered by which version of Android you have and you’ve been desperately waiting for Samsung’s next, true ‘mini’ phone, then you really can’t get much better than the Galaxy A3 2016. It may be a little expensive right now, but that’s sure to change with time, especially when Samsung products are renowned for falling in price not long after launch. While the OnePlus X is probably the phone you should be buying at this kind of price, the Galaxy A3 2016 is the one you’ll want to have in your pocket.

Buy Now from Mobilefun

Pages: 1 2

Hardware
ProcessorQuad-core 1.5GHz Exynos Octa 7580
RAM1.5GB
Screen size4.7in
Screen resolution1,280×720
Screen typeSuper AMOLED
Front camera5 megapixels
Rear camera13 megapixels
FlashLED
GPSYes
CompassYes
Storage (free)16GB (11GB)
Memory card slot (supplied)microSD
Wi-Fi802.11n
BluetoothBluetooth 4.1
NFCYes
Wireless data3G, 4G
Size135x65x7.3mm
Weight132g
Features
Operating systemAndroid 5.1.1
Battery size2,300mAh
Buying information
WarrantyOne year RTB
Price SIM-free (inc VAT)£269
Price on contract (inc VAT)N/A
Prepay price (inc VAT)N/A
SIM-free supplierhttp://www.mobilefun.co.uk/sim-free-samsung-galaxy-a3-2016-unlocked-16gb-black-p57335.htm
Contract/prepay supplierN/A
Detailswww.samsung.com/uk
Part codeSM-A310F

Read more

Reviews