• Tech News
    • Games
    • Pc & Laptop
    • Mobile Tech
    • Ar & Vr
    • Security
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
What's Hot

Elementor #32036

January 24, 2025

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

April 18, 2024

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

April 16, 2024
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest VKontakte
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
  • Tech News
    1. Games
    2. Pc & Laptop
    3. Mobile Tech
    4. Ar & Vr
    5. Security
    6. View All

    Bring Elden Ring to the table with the upcoming board game adaptation

    September 19, 2022

    ONI: Road to be the Mightiest Oni reveals its opening movie

    September 19, 2022

    GTA 6 images and footage allegedly leak

    September 19, 2022

    Wild west adventure Card Cowboy turns cards into weird and silly stories

    September 18, 2022

    7 Reasons Why You Should Study PHP Programming Language

    October 19, 2022

    Logitech MX Master 3S and MX Keys Combo for Business Gen 2 Review

    October 9, 2022

    Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Carbon Gen10 Review

    September 18, 2022

    Lenovo IdeaPad 5i Chromebook, 16-inch+120Hz

    September 3, 2022

    It’s 2023 and Spotify Still Can’t Say When AirPlay 2 Support Will Arrive

    April 4, 2023

    YouTube adds very convenient iPhone homescreen widgets

    October 15, 2022

    Google finishes iOS 16 Lock Screen widgets rollout w/ Maps

    October 14, 2022

    Is Apple actually turning iMessage into AIM or is this sketchy redesign rumor for laughs?

    October 14, 2022

    MeetKai launches AI-powered metaverse, starting with a billboard in Times Square

    August 10, 2022

    The DeanBeat: RP1 simulates putting 4,000 people together in a single metaverse plaza

    August 10, 2022

    Improving the customer experience with virtual and augmented reality

    August 10, 2022

    Why the metaverse won’t fall to Clubhouse’s fate

    August 10, 2022

    How Apple privacy changes have forced social media marketing to evolve

    October 16, 2022

    Microsoft Patch Tuesday October Fixed 85 Vulnerabilities – Latest Hacking News

    October 16, 2022

    Decentralization and KYC compliance: Critical concepts in sovereign policy

    October 15, 2022

    What Thoma Bravo’s latest acquisition reveals about identity management

    October 14, 2022

    What is a Service Robot? The vision of an intelligent service application is possible.

    November 7, 2022

    Tom Brady just chucked another Microsoft Surface tablet

    September 18, 2022

    The best AIO coolers for your PC in 2022

    September 18, 2022

    YC’s Michael Seibel clarifies some misconceptions about the accelerator • DailyTech

    September 18, 2022
  • Startup
    • Fintech
  • Reviews
  • How To
Behind The ScreenBehind The Screen
Home»Reviews»Samsung Galaxy A04s review
Reviews

Samsung Galaxy A04s review

September 6, 2023No Comments8 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Samsung Galaxy A04s
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
At a glance

Expert’s Rating

Pros

  • Cheap
  • Good battery life
  • Acceptable camera for a budget phone

Cons

  • Bad performance
  • Mediocre screen
  • Dull sound
  • Plastic construction

Our Verdict

There aren’t many reasons to recommend the Galaxy A04s, other than the fact that it’s a fully functional mobile phone for under £140. Several other budget mobiles are significantly faster, more comfortable and better looking.

Price When Reviewed

179 €

Best Prices Today:

€127.00

Cdiscount

€135.30

Rakuten

€142.39

Darty

€159.00

Fnac

€159.00

Samsung

€179

Amazon

142,93 €

Samsung makes some of the best, and most expensive, mobile phones in the world. Even their semi-expensive mid-range phones are mostly high quality and very popular.

But something seems to be happening when the Korean manufacturer is forced to turn the tables on the budget class. Then Samsung doesn’t do nearly as well.

Last year I tested the mediocre Galaxy A13. This year I couldn’t get hold of the sequel Galaxy A14, but instead had to check out its little sibling Galaxy A04s. I have no idea what the S stands for, and there is no “regular” Galaxy A04 does not exist.

It is at least a small step below the Galaxy A13, and most other budget mobiles I’ve tested, with a recommended price just below £140, though you can find it for less if you shop around.

But is it a good deal, even at that price? I am sceptical. It is a heavy and wide mobile phone, built entirely in glossy black plastic, which attracts grease, dust and fingerprints. Thick screen edges around a 6.5-inch screen make it impractical to grip. But its volume buttons and power button with built-in fingerprint reader are well placed, have clear mechanics and are easy to find. A slot on the side for dual sims also houses a separate micro SD card slot.

Old and budget on the inside

The Galaxy A04S is based on Samsung’s own Exynos 850 chipset, which wasn’t very impressive when it arrived in 2020. It’s the same chip that disappointed me in the Galaxy A13, and it doesn’t fare any better here. Especially since you only get 3GB RAM in the basic model.

Samsung Galaxy A04s skärm
The shifts in different viewing angles are so noticeable that it can be discerned even here, where I just angled the screen away slightly.

Mattias Inghe

I can’t even run Geekbench benchmark measurements on it, as that app has 4GB RAM as a system requirement. And the measurements I can run don’t give me reliable numbers.

See also  Sharp GX-BT60 evaluation

You also only get 32GB of storage, with both low read and write speeds. Large apps can take a long time to launch because of that, not to mention the time taken with a system boot of the entire phone.

Browsing heavy web pages is choppy and there are mini-delays everywhere in the interface, like bringing up a keyboard and starting to type text. It may be a matter of habit, but when there are mobiles in the price range that can avoid most of this, I think Samsung should definitely be able to do better.

Pluses and minuses for picture and sound

The screen is a 720p panel that is sharp enough for most things, but some fine text can be pixelated to read. The 90Hz frame rate could have made scrolling and navigation smoother, if the phone’s performance didn’t prevent it.

And yes, sometimes there is an improvement. It has a PLS-type LCD panel, which means that it has clear and unwelcome shifts in contrast at viewing angles around 45 degrees, but in return it has higher contrast from the front than most IPS LCD screens. And a little extra contrast may be needed, given that it has mediocre brightness of about 380cd/m2 at best. You’ll struggle to see anything on the screen if it’s bright outside.

Auto brightness does nothing to boost the light further, and uses the selfie camera instead of a separate light sensor, which drains the battery. The screen’s colours are close to SRGB-grade, but not much more, and although I find the colours to be neutral and natural, there are no obvious blue or red spots in the image.

You only get one mono speaker at the bottom. It sounds clear for voices, but is anything but enjoyable for music and film. On the other hand, I do not expect much more in the budget class, although Samsung is usually good at sound. If you want to connect headphones, you can do so with a traditional analogue plug, as the 3.5mm headphone jack is located next to the speaker at the bottom.

Samsung Galaxy A04s nedersida
USB-C port with slow charging, a boring mono speaker and headphone socket at the bottom.

Mattias Inghe

See also  Microsoft Surface Laptop Go 2 review: a little laptop for light work

Android 13, nowadays

When the Galaxy A04s was launched, it had Android 12. Now it ships with Android 13 and Samsung’s own One UI 5.1, but that means one of its two promised Android versions is “used up”. You’ll get Android 14 soon enough, but whether you’ll get more updates after that is less clear. This is quite normal in the budget class, but since Samsung has the best update policy on its more expensive mobiles, it would have been welcome to see the same here.

One UI 5.1 is a feature-rich interface, but it’s been scaled back slightly for this low-performance phone, so you don’t have the side menu enabled for quick access to split-screen and dual apps, for example. I guess Samsung wants to avoid enticing people to utilise it given how little RAM the phone has.

Struggling in the evening

The cameras on the back are three in number, a 50Mp main camera, a 2Mp macro and a support sensor for depth perception. You’ll have to do without ultrawide-angle photography, but the camera app’s 2x zoom mode provides easy digital zooming that still delivers good image quality. In daylight, the camera performs well, with natural colour balance and good dynamics and detail in both shadows and highlights.

It can be difficult to take quick action shots, as the focus is a little sluggish, but with a steady hand and patience, images can be sharp. Portraits and self-portraits both turn out well thanks to AI-based face detection, but with anything that’s not a human, it struggles with edge detection. At best, you’re shooting in 1080p and 30fps, with shaky autofocus and not much stabilisation.

Shooting at night and in dark indoor environments is not a great experience. Here, autofocus easily loses the last five or ten per cent of fine tuning, which means that details are quickly blurred, although a landscape image still looks okay. There are also some problems keeping the white balance neutral and dark surfaces can sometimes become mottled.

Samsung Galaxy A04s kameror
The cameras, one of the few things that maintain good basic quality in the mobile phone.

Mattias Inghe

With moderate performance, a power-efficient PLS screen and a 5,000 milliamp-hour battery, battery life should at least be good. And yes, I can stream films nonstop from breakfast to dinner at full brightness, or email and surf even longer if I dim the screen slightly. According to the specs, it supports 15W USB-C charging, but no charger is included. With a 20W Samsung charger I had lying around, I went from zero to 30% battery in half an hour, and you can expect well over two hours to reach a full charge. Not exactly fast, but on the other hand, you don’t have to charge it at the drop of a hat.

See also  Be Lucent Prism sonic toothbrush review

You get Wi-Fi 5 support and 4G connectivity, and both seem fast and stable. I don’t think I need more than that in a budget phone. Some smartphones in this price range stubbornly try to offer 5G, and then they have to compromise on other things to keep the price down. But I don’t know what Samsung could have cut back on the Galaxy A04s and still be viable, so it’s probably a good thing they’ve reined you in on that point.

This is a phone that’s just barely usable, and there are clearly better options. If you really want to save money and find it even cheaper than the standard price of £140, you might consider it, otherwise I would recommend that you check out the competition.

Specs

Product name: Samsung Galaxy A04s
Tested: August 2023
System chipset: Samsung Exynos 850
Processor: 8pcs Cortex A55 2 GHz
Graphics: ARM Mali-G52 MC1
Memory: 3 GB
Storage: 32 GB, micro SD slot
Display: 6.5 inch pls, 720×1200 pixels, 90 Hz
Cameras: 50 megapixel + 2 megapixel macro + depth sensor with led, 5 megapixel front
Connections: usb 2 type c, 3.5mm headset
Communications: 2g, 3g, 4g, wifi 5, bluetooth 5.0, gps, galileo, nfc
Operating system: Android 13 with One UI
Other: Dual sim, fingerprint scanner on side
Battery: 5,000 mAh, 12 hours 20 min online video (wifi, high brightness), about 17 hours mixed use (4g, low brightness), about 31 hours calls
Battery charging: 15 W usb c, charger not included
Size: 16.47 x 7.67 x 0.91 cm
Weight: 195 grams
Rec. price: 1 980 SEK
Current price: 1 745 at Telefonshoppen

Performance

Antutu Benchmark: 132,091 points
Geekbench 6: Not measured
Geekbench 6 single core: Not measured
3dmark Wild Life: 494 points
Storage, read: 225 MB/s
Storage, write: 147.1 MB/s

Source link

A04s Galaxy Review Samsung
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

April 18, 2024

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

April 16, 2024

Cosori TurboBlaze Air Fryer review

April 15, 2024

Should you buy the Nothing Phone (2) or save money and just get the Phone (2a)? Here’s our verdict

April 15, 2024
Add A Comment

Comments are closed.

Editors Picks

APIs and zero trust named as top priorities for CISOs in 2023

August 26, 2022

Amazon’s Lord Of The Rings: The Rings of Power is great, but the games need to reach PS2-era brilliance again

September 9, 2022

A US Agency Rejected Face Recognition—and Landed in Big Trouble

March 22, 2023

Goat Simulator 3 headbutts its strategy to a November launch

July 29, 2022

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news and Updates from Behind The Scene about Tech, Startup and more.

Top Post

Elementor #32036

The Redmi Note 13 is a bigger downgrade compared to the 5G model than you might think

Xiaomi Redmi Watch 4 is a budget smartwatch with a premium look and feel

Behind The Screen
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Vimeo YouTube
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2025 behindthescreen.uk - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.