Android Confidential: 3 reasons why you should buy a cheap Android phone this October

You can resist the lure of premium.

It's gonna be one heck of a fall for Android fans. Over the next few weeks the Pixel 3, Huawei Mate 20, and LG V40 are all due to drop, and we may even get a peek at Samsung's fabled folding phone. So I wouldn't blame you if you were already bracing yourself for the blow your wallet is about to take.

But what if it didn't have to be that way? What if you didn't need to spend nine hundred or a thousand dollars to get the best phone for you? In the latest episode of Android Confidential, I make the case for buying a cheaper phone rather than one of the outrageously expensive ones that cost as much as many laptops:

Space and power to spare

With all of the new premium phones coming out, you're sure to get as much speed and space as you can need. But do you really need 128GB, 256GB, even 512GB in a phone? It wasn't too long ago when 16GB was enough space, and nowadays we stream everything and store our photos in the cloud (or should, so you don't lose them if your phone dies or disappears). If you have to have a high-end phone, consider the 64GB option—it could be plenty for your needs. 

The Snapdragon 845 processor that will surely power the LG V40 and Pixel 3 is a beast, as is the Kirin 980 that will be inside the Mate 20. But what do we really need all that speed for? A chip like the Snapdragon 660 inside the Nokia 7 (which runs the near-stock, lightweight Android One) will be just as good for most people.

Screen overload

Over the past couple of years, phablet phones have shifted from 5.5 inches to 6-plus inches, and they're about to get even bigger. The Google Pixel 3 XL is rumored to be 6.7 inches, while the Mate 20 could be a whopping 6.9 inches. Add that to the 6.4-inch Note 9 and the 6.5-inch iPhone XS Max, and we're really stretching the limits of our hands and pockets.

Resolution is another thing. Retina (the point where pixels are unable to be seen by the human eye) is only 300ppi, so are we really gaining anything with 500-plus ppi? Maybe give a full HD or even a standard HD phone a shot this year.

More money, more problems

If there's one thing all of these phones are going to have in common, its that they're all going to be extremely fragile. Maybe I'm crazy, but I miss the days of plastic and metal phones that I could throw across a room without worrying about a massive repair bill.

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