Android Advisor

Sony Xperia XA2 Ultra

£379 inc VAT from fave.co/2pb7hk9

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Sony makes good phones. Even some great phones. But it cannot escape criticism for its design language and large bezels. This isn’t because the bezels are actually that much of an issue. Big bezels do not a bad phone make. It’s because Sony releases so many phones with such regularity that we, and other tech reviewers and consumers, end up getting disappoint­ed at seeing the

same design every three to six months. The design itself isn’t much of a problem.

But if you just hate on bezels (and many do), the Xperia XA2 Ultra won’t make you happy. It’s a pricier version of the XA2 that has more battery, a larger display and dual selfie cameras. Is that enough to ignore its unwieldy size?

Design

At the front, the Xperia XA2 Ultra looks pretty much identical to the previous model. The main giveaway that it’s now comes via the two camera lenses in the top bezel. Looking at the phone from the top or bottom sees a subtle slight curved design, complete with bevelled edges. However, the remainder of the XA2 Ultra looks distinctly average and even dated. Granted, the screen goes right to the edges at either side, but the phone has hefty bezels above and below. The wait for an 18:9 bezel-free Xperia goes on.

Unless you have huge hands (and pockets) or simply love physically huge phones, the XA2 Ultra is too big. Previously, having a large 6in screen would justify its massive size, but we’ve rightly come to expect slim and light handsets, even in the mid-range.

The Samsung Galaxy A8 is in the same price range with a bezel-less design similar to the Galaxy S8, making the XA2 Ultra look fairly ridiculous by comparison.

It’s not just about the looks though, it’s also impossible to use one-handed. The Xperia XZ1 had big bezels but was slim, light and packed stereo front-facing speakers. The XA2 Ultra is very heavy and uses only its top bezel effectivel­y, housing the headline dual selfie cameras.

The build quality on show is premium, and the metal design is robust, though the back is a textured plastic. Volume rocker, power key and the excellent dedicated shutter button are on the right side, while Sony has moved the fingerprin­t sensor to the rear for the first time, under the camera lens.

Thankfully for American Sony fans, the fingerprin­t sensor now actually works thanks to the end of a long-running legal battle. The camera also had a flash, as do the two front facing sensors. A speaker on the bottom edge accompanie­s a modern USB-C port. The XA2 Ultra amounts to a monolithic slab of smartphone, an unashamed brick of a thing.

It comes in the blue of our review unit, as well as black, gold and silver.

Hardware

As you’d expect, the XA2 Ultra is a bigger version of the regular model. However, there are more difference­s here than just a larger screen. The screen is exactly the same as the XA1 Ultra at 6in with a Full HD 1080p resolution resulting is a fairly poor 367ppi. That’s a decent chunk bigger than the 5.2in XA2.

Despite the low pixels per inch, Netflix binges on the train look pretty decent. But you’ll have to put up with its mad 221g weight, one of the only phones

we’ve reviewed recently that tips the scale over 200g. For comparison, the 6in screened Honor 7X is 165g.

It’s nice to have a big screen, but you’ve got to really want it here to live with the size and weight of the phone, as the 16:9 aspect ratio makes it huge. The 6in screen on the recent Honor 7X is a slighter 18:9, looks great and costs £269.99 at the time of writing – £100 less than the XA2 Ultra.

The display settings hidden away do improve things though. Usually phones come with the saturation turned up, which is less natural but more attractive. You can turn on standard mode to boost it at little, or go all-out with super vivid mode. We prefer standard, but it’s good that the option is there to bring some life to the natural but dull out of the box settings.

Unlike the MediaTek chip in the previous XA1, the XA2 Ultra has a Qualcomm Snapdragon 630 processor. A small upgrade on the power-efficient 625, the 630 here proved to give excellent battery life both in real world usage and the Geekbench 4 battery test, where it ran for an excellent nine hours and 57 minutes. The pairing of energy efficient chip and 3,850mAh battery proves solid. There’s also NFC for mobile payments.

There’s a tame 32GB storage on board, but you can expand with a microSD card up to 256GB. Some regions will get a 64GB option but both versions come with 4GB RAM, an upgrade on the regular XA2’s 3GB.

As is the case for most phones in this price range, there isn’t wireless charging or any form of official water or dust resistance rating. Despite this, the Ultra has a decent set of specs for the price.

Cameras

The rear-facing camera is a 23Mp Sony sensor with f/2.0 aperture, but the software processing doesn’t take advantage of the megapixels. Unless you’re in bright sunlight, the results are disappoint­ing and muddy. Colour reproducti­on is often inaccurate too, though it can handle light well in landscape shots, even if the sky on the below photo is a little blown out.

Sony markets the Ultra as a phone for selfies as the two front-facing cameras allow for wide angle group shots, or just a way to get more of the background in. It’s quite good but you get the fish bowl effect often seen at the edges of pictures taken with such a set up. You may also want to turn off the on-by-default skin softening mode.

A real boon here is the selfie cameras’ optical image stabilizat­ion, something the rear camera

actually lacks. It means your group selfie shots will be largely blur free, and it’s good to see on the phone considerin­g the price.

If you’re into your selfies you will enjoy the feature, but there are better camera setups on other mid-range phones.

One nice-to-have feature is 4K video recording, unusual on a mid-range handset. The phone does struggle to process it though and lags considerab­ly

during recording. The slo-mo recording feature from Xperia flagships has also been ported over for recording bursts of 120fps footage.

The added AR feature is fun to turn your living room into a prehistori­c scene and the timeshift burst mode lets you select the best shot from several, handy if you have a moving pet or child to snap.

We still recommend spending more on a higherend phone if photograph­y is important to you. Despite Sony’s insistence that the camera tech here is top end, it isn’t quite. A better display and better software processing are needed such as on Google’s Pixel 2 or the Huawei Mate 10 Pro.

Audio

Where the XA2 Ultra does deliver is in its audio delivery. Though it lacks front facing speakers, the wired headphone experience on the phone is great. ClearAudio+ is a software setting that optimizes the sound output, making music and video brighter and more immersive. It’s a surprising­ly decent feature, but might not be to your taste if you prefer a compressed sound and isn’t driven by a hardware DAC like on the (admittedly pricier) LG V30.

Software

Pleasingly, the XA2 Ultra comes with Android 8.0 Oreo on-board. This is excellent news for a mid-range device, and Sony has beaten tons of handsets double the price to get it. You can enjoy features like picture in picture and password auto-fill. Sony is also doing a good job at the moment with monthly security

updates. Sony’s Android skin is minimal, with only minor aesthetic changes to Google’s stock version. It’s very crisp and clean and doesn’t make any change for change sake like Honor does with its EMUI skin. Sony still pre-installs and pushes SwiftKey on you, but we prefer to download and use Google’s Gboard.

Performanc­e

Opposite are benchmarks from the XA2 Ultra and some comparable phones. The Ultra is a solid choice for mobile gaming, though if that’s the reason you’re looking to buy you will want to spend a bit more on a high-end phone.

Casual gaming looks great, and the extra money you will pay compared to the Honor 7X (with its Kirin 659 chip) or the Moto G5S Plus (with the older Snapdragon 625) will be worth it.

Multi-tasking is also fluid even when using many apps or when in split screen mode but the phone can lag when shooting and playing 4K video.

Verdict

The Sony Xperia XA2 Ultra is a weird phone. Sony could have made a svelte mid-range Xperia at a lower cost than its flagships, but has instead made a £379 chunky mess. You can get the XZ1 for £449 in the UK now, and we strongly recommend that phone over this one. If you really want a 6in 16:9 screen, then the XA2 Ultra is one of the only ones on the market and its performanc­e is solid. The rear camera is acceptable and the audio quality, run by Android Oreo, is topnotch. But with cheaper mid-range phones like the Honor 7X boasting more compact 18:9 6in displays, the huge XA2 Ultra is a phone that will only appeal if you love the design, its audio quirks, and have a pocket big enough to fit it in. Henry Burrell

Specificat­ions

• 6in (1920x1080, 367ppi) IPS LCD capacitive display

• Android 8.0 Oreo

• Qualcomm SDM630 Snapdragon 630 processor

• Octa-core 2.2GHz Cortex-A53 CPU

• Adreno 508 GPU

• 4GB RAM

• 32/64GB storage, microSD up to 256GB

• Fingerprin­t scanner

• 23Mp rear-facing camera: f/2.0, 24mm, 1/2.3in, phase detection autofocus, LED flash

• Dual front-facing cameras: 16Mp, f/2.0, 23mm, 1/2.6in, OIS, AF, and 8Mp, f/2.4, 1/4in

• 802.11a/b/g/n Wi-Fi

• Bluetooth 5.0

• A-GPS, GLONASS

• Micro-USB 2.0 Type-C

• Non-removable lithium-ion 3,580mAh battery

• 163x80x9.5mm

• 221g

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