Vivo V5 review

Vivo V5

Specs :

NETWORK

LAUNCH
2016, November
Available. Released 2016, November

BODY
153.8 x 75.5 x 7.6 mm (6.06 x 2.97 x 0.30 in)
154 g (5.43 oz)
Dual SIM (Micro-SIM/Nano-SIM, dual stand-by)

DISPLAY
IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
5.5 inches (~71.8% screen-to-body ratio)
720 x 1280 pixels (~267 ppi pixel density)
Yes
Corning Gorilla Glass (unspecified version)

- Funtouch OS 2.6

PLATFORM
Android OS, v6.0 (Marshmallow)
Mediatek MT6750
Octa-core 1.5 GHz Cortex-A53
Mali-T860MP2

MEMORY
microSD, up to 256 GB (uses SIM 2 slot)
32 GB, 4 GB RAM

CAMERA
13 MP, phase detection autofocus, LED flash, check quality
Geo-tagging, touch focus, face detection, panorama, HDR
1080p@30fps, check quality
20 MP, f/2.0, 1/2.8" sensor size, 1080p

SOUND
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
Yes
Yes

- 24-bit/192kHz audio
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic

COMMS
Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n, WiFi Direct, DLNA, hotspot
v4.0, A2DP
Yes, with A-GPS
FM radio
microUSB v2.0, USB On-The-Go

FEATURES
Fingerprint (front-mounted), accelerometer, proximity, compass
SMS (threaded view), MMS, Email, Push Email
HTML5
No

- MP4/H.264 player
- MP3/WAV/eAAC+/FLAC player
- Document viewer
- Photo/video editor

BATTERY

Non-removable Li-Ion 3000 mAh battery

MISC
Gold, Gray
0.22 W/kg (head)     0.77 W/kg (body)    


TESTS

Review :


The design of the Vivo V5 makes it look like a mashup of many popular phones in the market. There's an unmistakable iPhone 6 influence in the back of the phone, and from the front, it could pass off as a OnePlus 3 or an Oppo model. Oddly, this works in Vivo V5's favour so we really don't mind. Build quality is good, with Corning Gorilla Glass protecting the display and the faux-metal chassis blending together very well. We also love the fact that it's slim and light, at just 154 grams, though we would have preferred real metal here.
The 5.5-inch IPS display is bright with good colour saturation, which almost makes it look like an AMOLED panel. The resolution of the screen is only HD but this doesn't affect its performance too much as text is still fairly sharp and there's barely any jaggedness around icons. The Vivo V5 comes with backlit capacitive navigation buttons, and a fingerprint sensor is integrated into the Home button. The sensor was incredibly quick at authenticating us and always worked accurately. You can even use it to lock apps, in addition to unlocking the phone.
The Vivo V5 has an ergonomic design and despite its slim profile, it offers decent grip. The bottom of the phone is quite busy as the headphones socket, Micro-USB port, and speaker grille are all lined up here. The back has a matte finish but it still managed to attract plenty of fingerprints and smudges during our review period. There's a dual-SIM tray on the left, which can accommodate a microSD card (up to 128GB) in the second slot. In the box, you get a 10W charger which feels unnecessarily large, a data cable, a silicone case, a headset, and a SIM ejector tool.
The V5 is powered by an octa-core MediaTek MT6750 SoC, which is the same one used by the Oppo F1s. Along with it, you get 4GB of RAM and 32GB of storage, which is plenty to ensure a smooth Android experience. We didn't notice any performance issues when we played with this phone for a bit at its launch, and even after using it for a few days, that still holds true. In benchmarks, we got an AnTuTu score of 40,916, while GFXbench returned 21fps in the graphics test.
Other features of the Vivo V5 include Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Bluetooth 4.0, USB OTG, GPS, and FM radio. Vivo ships the V5 with FunTouchOS 2.6, which is now based on Android Marshmallow. Other than features like Now on Tap and the battery optimisations brought upon by Android 6.0, it's impossible to tell the version of Android you're running due to Vivo's extensive redesign. With most companies now moving away from heavy customisations, Vivo is among a handful of companies with a custom OS, though the trend is definitely more popular with Chinese companies. Vivo V5's software looks and functions just like it did on the previous V-series phones, which isn't necessarily a good thing.
One you get acquainted with Vivo's spin on Android, it's not too bad to live with. We used it for a few days and were happy with the phone's performance in general. Loading times for apps on the Vivo V5 are relatively short and there aren't any visible signs of a performance bottleneck when multi-tasking. You can do a bit of gaming too, although some high-end games like Asphalt 8: Airborne need their graphics settings reduced a bit for the best experience. What we really loved though, is that phone rarely heats up. Even while benchmarking, the Vivo V5 would get slightly warm at best. Call quality is good and 4G works well. The Vivo V5 supports VoLTE as well.
The highlight feature of the Vivo V5 is its front-facing 20-megapixel camera, which boasts of a Sony IMX376 sensor with f/2.0 aperture, and a fixed-focus lens. It supports full-HD video recording and Face Beauty shooting mode. In daylight, the sensor manages highly detailed selfies with very good colour reproduction. However, indoor shots under artificial lighting are grainy and there's a noticeable loss in quality. There's quite a bit of shutter lag too, which makes photographing moving subjects a real challenge.
The V5 also has what's called called a 'moonlight flash', which shines a continuous beam of diffused light to illuminate your face. It's not too powerful if you're holding the phone at a distance but it does a better job at lighting you up than a typical LED flash or a screen flash. The quality of selfies in low light is once again a bit of hit and miss. You can finetune your selfie with the 'One-tap makeover' option.
The Vivo V5 is a step up from its predecessor but fails to strike a decisive blow against the competition. The marque feature of this phone is its 20-megapixel front camera, which seems impressive, but isn't actually ground-breaking in any way. The high megapixel count feels unnecessary, unless you plan on printing A4 size posters of your selfies.
The Vivo V5 does have a few redeeming qualities though, like the display, excellent battery life, and snappy Android performance. However, at Rs. 17,980, you're better off with the Oppo F1s, Which shares these same qualities, but is also built better and has a much better set of cameras. The Gionee S6s is also a good alternative if you want to spend a bit less. If you don't mind waiting for a little while, you could also grab the upgraded F1s, which will have 4GB RAM and 64GB storage, at Rs. 1,000 more in December.

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