Reece Bithrey is a twenty-one-year-old freelance journalist who reviews and writes about shiny things for a living. Lots of shiny things.
Sony's Xperia 5 V was described to me by a representative as their more trendy flagship, designed for younger people and influencers. Well, on the first part, I feel like I'm the target market; the second part perhaps not so much. Priced atand seemingly only available in the UK at present, the Xperia 5 V represents the mid-range option with Sony's latest Xperia lineup of handsets, flanked by the flagship Xperia 1 V and the much more affordable Xperia 10 V.
The 5V is available in three colours, with a choice of either Black, Platinum or the Blue option I've got here. It's always nice to see at least one unique colour option, and it certainly makes the Xperia 5 V stand out when not hidden behind a case. There also isn't a noticeable camera bump, in contrast to the vast majority of phones on the market these days.
The presence of a 120Hz refresh rate keeps motion smooth, which is especially welcome in day to day navigation and swiping, as well as in games where that high refresh rate is most welcome. With even budget phones now offering 90Hz refresh rates, the extra 30Hz is a small but noticeable improvement.The presence of a dual camera setup on the reverse of the Xperia 5 V is one of the things that drew my attention first of all.
In Geekbench 6, its scores are reflective of its beefy power, with some fantastic results in both single and multi core workloads for the CPU. It's much the same story when moving over to 3D Mark Wild Life Extreme, too, with some great scores posted relative to other phones from Google, OnePlus and Samsung in the same area.
Playing Diablo Immortal was a lot of fun, although the smaller screen didn't exactly help the immersion factor.
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Grab this M2-powered MacBook Air for just £903 from Amazon right nowReece Bithrey is a twenty-one-year-old freelance journalist who reviews and writes about shiny things for a living. Lots of shiny things.
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