Vivo T3x 5G Introduction:
Vivo T3x mobile is meant for online buyers looking to buy a budget smartphone in India. T2 isn't yet offered in the mix cell phone section, and it's an increasingly moderate form of this present year released Vivo T3 (review) model. However, as always is the case with bargains, a few trade-offs had to be made but it still manages to hold its own in the sub-Rs. 15,000 segment when it comes performance and battery life. Keep reading to know more.
Vivo T3x 5G is Best Budget Gaming Smartphone Whether it's for regular using or causal gaming, this phone is versatile enough. Meanwhile, the phone had a decent screen and battery life; sure it looked okay too. But the cameras are bound to leave you unfulfilled.
Vivo T3x 5G Design:
Vivo T3x Specification and features a stylish, cool line design improbable changed with double. The appearance of Vivo's mobile phone products this year has been simpler than ever The Celestial Green colour is very elegant and stands out. The variant also masks fingerprints and smudge very well, hence maintaining the phone clean. It also weights much less than you would expect associated with being a heavy phone with a sizeable 6,000mAh battery on board, the smartphone only weighs at around 199 grams which makes it relatively easy to use and carry around in day-to-day usage. The flat edges also give a decent grip to hold the device.
The bottom edge has a USB Type-C port for charging and data transfer flanked by the 3.5mm headphone jack and another speaker grill on the right side are the volume rocker, and a power button that doubles up as fingerprint scanner. It's equipped with a working fingerprint scanner that unlocks the device in an instant. I am OK with a circular camera module and all the attention it gets at the rear, but I do wish honor made things centre-aligned. It would have eliminated the wobble while sitting flat on a surface for superior typing.
Vivo T3x 5G Display:
As for the Vivo T3x display, it is a 6.72-inch panel of LCD variety that you would most likely find in any other budget smartphone It offers an FHD+ display with a 120Hz refresh rate, maximum of 1000 nits brightness (HBM), and slight bezels all around as well as the centred punch-hole for selfie camera. The experience of watching anything is OK for the cost. The display does not pop as much and is vibrant as an AMOLED panel but has decent brightness. The screen didn't give me much of a problem as long I was reading the text outside in natural light. The phone is Widevine L1 certified so you can watch all your favorite shows on streaming platforms in FHD. Since mono speaker, sound is workable but max volume not crisp.
Vivo T3x 5G Camera:
In terms of the optics, Vivo T3x features a 50MP primary camera with support for AF alongside Dual-LED Flash and comes accompanied by a 2MP depth sensor. These are simple point and shoot cameras, which shows them in the performance. Although lacking the crispness and detail, it still has a nice look to them. The device does tilt towards a little warmer side with shots to look more eye pleasing. But photo buffs might grouse about the limited dynamic range of those images. The shadow areas can get questionable, but that is somewhat understandable when considering the price tag of this smartphone. The Cameras would only take long exposure images in low light you might not be able to turn it off. Even then the results are very meh. Images have noise distorts and makes it over all very mild if your hands are shaky.
The Vivo T3x goes with an 8MP selfie shooter for selfies as well, which does a decent job of capturing facial detail even if skin tones aren't the most true to life. There is a bit of detail loss here as well when it doesn’t involve the face, but edge detection appears to be better than with front camera.
For photography, the Moto G64 does a better job than the Vivo phone, and it gets another 50 MP sensor along with other two cameras at its rear. Dynamic range and detail appear better in the Moto smartphone when looking even at daylight images (filter). It's also looking more vivid and nicer especially together with T3x colors.
Vivo T3x 5G Performance:
The Vivo T3x is powered by an octa-core Snapdragon 6 Gen 1 chipset supported with up to 8GB of RAM and a user-expandable storage capable of holding as much data as you require, making for plenty space in which install all your software. The chipset ensures consistent performance for the device, both on synthetic benchmarks and real-world applications. On the benchmarking front, the Vivo smartphone gets 549,494 on AnTuTu and scored of 940 in single-core and 2,767 in multicore performance at Geekbench. This is a lot better performance than most of it’s under Rs. 15,000 competitors.
The Vivo T3x also throttles pretty significantly in the Burnout test, slowing to just 81 percent of its peak performance. The phone will work with a lot of load like multitasking and gaming. On the gaming front, it sailed through our daily dose of BGMI, Call of Duty and Real Racing 3 as well just feeling a bit warm but without raising any alarm bells. A drop in frame-rate will be noticeable but the experience remains fun to play.
Vivo T3x 5G Software:
As far as the software is concerned, Vivo T3x will run on custom FunTouchOS based on Android 14. There is nothing special about the user experience that stands out compared to other Vivo smartphone from 2019. A bunch of apps come pre-installed, a few of which are third-party including Netflix, Snapchat and Candy Crush to name a couple As popular as they are, at least third-party apps can be uninstalled if you don't need them for a cleaner software experience.
Other than these, there are numerous customisation options such as a system and app UI color picker (Material You compatible), new clock styles for the lock screen and always-on display. The phone is said to have a two-year plan for OS updates and then another three years of security patches, which are in line with other models in its price point.
Vivo T3x 5G Battery:
But this is Vivo we're talking about, the vivo T3x has a 6,000mAh battery inside that scored an outstanding endurance rating of nearly 24 hours on our PC Mk benchmark test. During our YouTube and gaming test, the battery management of the phone was also quite good. We watched a 30-minute video in FHD+ resolution with the brightness and volume levels at 50 percent, and the battery only depleted by 3 percent.
In the same way, BGMI battery usage in gaming was about 30% of each punch (approximately an hour and a half), while spending just over half-hour on Call of Duty or Real Racing three yielded a humble fifteen percent drop. The phone comes with 44W fast charging and it takes almost an hour to fully charge the battery from zero percent. Inside the box is a charger that works with this.
Conclusion:
In India, the Vivo T3x is priced at Rs. 13,499 for its base model with 4GB RAM while the higher-end versions that come in different configurations including a version with up to 8 GB of memory. As for performance, all the devices are pretty much on similar lines with what we have seen in our test scores of the T3X and just to inform you that this Moto smartphone offers a near stock android experience.
For the budget-stricken ones, and if someone is okay to go with a custom android experience; Vivo T3x looks like a trustworthy option. Its cameras may slip underneath the influences of some, but this is one device with zippy great performance; astounding battery life and a nice-looking blueprint to match.
This content was last updated on 23 November 2024.