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Image Credit: Supplied

LG’s latest flagship mobile phone is designed to meet the high expectations that no-compromise, power users of Android phones have been craving.

Fortunately, it manages to meet most of those demands. The successor to one of the best phablets (phone-tablet) of last year, the G3, the G4 boasts a removable back, expandable storage and replaceable battery — the last remaining mainstream Android smartphone manufacturer to do so.

Like most of LG’s other smartphones, the G4’s design is rather understated. A plain black face, thin bezels, a dark chromed plastic edge and a simple plastic back. One version offers a leather back, although that’s not everyone’s cup of tea. LG is not going to win any design awards for the G4’s looks. It also feels a bit cheap in the hand compared with the likes of the Samsung Galaxy S6 or the iPhone 6 Plus. It weighs 155 grams.

A very slight curve to the screen is unusual, and is meant to help the phone survive being dropped without smashing the screen. I didn’t put it to the test but, like its banana-shaped brother, the phone feels like it can take a knock or two. The power button and volume buttons are hidden on the back underneath the camera, which I quite like.

The 5.5-inch screen itself is one of the best ever fitted to a smartphone, with very black blacks, true-to-life colours and a pixel density of 538 pixels per inch making it pin-sharp. It5 is powered by six-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 808 processor — 1.82GHz dual-core Cortex-A57 & quad-core 1.44 GHz Cortex-A53 processors — with 3GB of RAM and 32GB of internal storage capacity coupled with microSD card slot of up to 128GB.

For comparison, Samsung’s Galaxy S6 screen has a pixel density of 577ppi and Apple’s iPhone 6 Plus 401ppi.

Looking at the specifications, LG has made a curious choice of processor for the G4. Typically, flagship smartphones use top-of-the-line processors, but the G4 is fitted with Qualcomm’s six-core Snapdragon 808, not the chip company’s most powerful Octacore 810. That could be to do with reported overheating issues in the 810.

Either way the G4 is snappy and responsive with no hint of lag or lack of performance. A side-by-side real-world test of the G4 against the Samsung Galaxy S6 showed very little difference in response to loading apps, playing games and navigating through menus. Where the G4 has the edge is in battery life. I easily got two solid days of work out of the G4 on a single charge, with push email all day, many hundreds of push notifications, some streaming music and 20 or so camera snaps.

The LG4 lacks built-in wireless charging, requiring an optional case, and charges slower than many of the competition, but then you have to charge it half as much. Simple, fast and tap-happy LG customises the standard Android experience on its smartphones. Typically the system is colourful and full of options for the owner.

The changes to G4’s Android are simpler and mostly welcome. For instance, users can customise the arrangement of the standard Android home, back and multitasking soft keys or change the typeface and text size. A super-simple interface for “beginners” — LG’s words — is also available. LG’s Smart Bulletin homescreen panel aims to be a Google Now replacement, pulling information from calendars, health tracking apps and the weather. Perhaps LG’s best addition to Android is its KnockOn and KnockCode — double tap to wake or sleep the screen, or tap out a lock code on a black screen to unlock the phone. Both work well and should be standard to Android.

The G4’s camera has some of the best lowlight performance I have ever tested on a smartphone. It has an F-stop of 1.8 (a measure of the speed of the lens: the lower the number, the brighter the image captured). Most smartphones have camera lenses above two. The iPhone 6 has an F-stop of 2.2. Some, like the Galaxy S6, have F-stops of 1.9. For perspective, the prime lens on my Nikon digital SLR, which I used to take photos of the G4, has an F-stop of 1.8.

Numbers aside, the G4 makes dull days and indoor shots look like bright sunlight, with no graining or artefacts. Images are sharp and detailed, colour-accurate and vibrant, while the camera focuses fast. The shallow depth of field is also quite remarkable, creating pleasing bokeh effects.

The camera app has a manual mode, which gives users access to white balance, focus, ISO, shutter speed and RAW image files, each adjustable with an easy-to-use slider. The automatic mode does an excellent job of managing most situations, however. The front-facing camera is also one of the best I’ve tried, once you turn off the automatic make-up effect.

Regarding connectivity, it has LTE, Wi-Fi ac, BT 4.1 and NFC.

A removable battery, expandable storage and brilliant camera make up for the cheap design and materials, as every other mainstream manufacturer prefers to spend on the latter. But it doesn’t feel as premium, and isn’t made from metal, although leather options are available. Aesthetics aside, solid performance, two-day battery life and a great 5.5-inch screen make the G4 one of the most usable and best phablets available. It is priced at Dh2,699 in the UAE.

— Guardian News & Media Ltd