HTC DESIRE 816 REVIEW
HTC gets colourful with this good-looking mid-range phone
The HTC Desire 816 is a large, colourful, plastic-bodied phone. Once
the Desire range was home to HTC's top phones, but now it has
become a lower-cost alternative to its One models.
Although we saw the 816 during a strictly a no-touching preview at
MWC 2014 , we've had a good look at the phone and had a chat with
an HTC representative to find out what the HTC Desire 816 is all about.
It's a phone that HTC says will cost a fraction of the HTC One Max's
price.
HTC Desire 816 – Design
The HTC Desire 816 is a striking phone, especially in some of its bolder
colours. HTC has caerfully selected the colour tones so that they're
bright, but have a hint of pastel to avoid becoming outright garish.
And where white plastic phones can look cheap, this one looks quite
stylish.
There's a mix of glossy and matt finishes on the phone, which be tricky
to pull off, but I think HTC has done it this time. Its massive size will
turn some off, but I think it is a lot more visually cohesive than the
HTC One Max. That's this phone's higher-end brother.
It's also slimmer and lighter than the Max. The HTC Desire 816 is
7.99mm thick and 165g – a massive 50g-plus lighter and more than
2mm thinner. It really does show up the Max.
It doesn't trade away many hardware features to do so, either. The
Desire 816 has the same BoomSound series speakers as the HTC One ,
and a rep promised that they are not watered down versions but the
same drivers used in HTC's more expensive phones. That's a huge win
for a phone that should make an excellent games and movies device.
The glossy back of the phone pops off to give access to a memory card
slot (missing from One-series phones) and a nano SIM slot. Unless this
is a typo in the 816's spec roster, it's the first time we've seen a nano
SIM in an HTC device as it normally uses micro SIMs. It could be a
sign of things to come in the HTC One 2 .
A pull-off back probably won't feel quite as nice as the unibody style
of the HTC One, but it does let the Desire 816 keeps its sides clean and
clear.
Here's the purple version
HTC Desire 816 – Screen
The screen doesn't escape compromise, though. It is 720p resolution
where HTC's larger One-series phones are 1080p. A pixel density rating
of 267ppi means sharpness will be pretty good, but a little short of
perfect.
We didn't really get close enough to assess the contrast and colour
reproduction of the panel, but there are no major viewing angle issues.
I expect this phone uses either an S-LCD2 or S-LCD3-type screen, with
similar performance to an IPS display.
HTC Desire 816 – Power and Other Specs
The HTC Desire offers a pretty good spec list, but it's one of a mid-
range phone, not a high-end one. It has a Snapdragon 400 processor
clocked at 1.6GHz, and it is the quad-core variant using Cortex-A7
cores rather than the dual-core Krait version seen in the HTC One
Mini.
You get 1.5GB of RAM and – something a mid-range phone wouldn't
have had 12 months ago – 4G mobile internet. Internal storage is a
fairly lowly 8GB, but as there's a micorSD card slot on the phone, it's
not a major issue.
HTC Desire 816 – Cameras
As part of the Desire series rather than the One range, the HTC Desire
816 doesn't get an UltraPixel camera. Instead, it uses a more normal,
but much higher-res, 13-megapixel sensor with an LED flash. Oddly
enough, this should actually get you much more detailed photos in
bright sunlight than an HTC One Max. But low-light performance and
dynamic range are likely to be a good deal worse.
The camera uses an f/2.2 lens, though, which is fairly fast. We'll assess
the camera properly when we get a Desire 816 in to review.
It's actually the front camera that's more notable, though. It has an
unusually high-res 5-megapixel sensor. We've seen advanced front-
facing cameras on Huawei phones like the Ascend P6 , but spreading
out to other major brands in major phones means it could soon
become the norm. All it means is much higher-quality selfies, but as
such things were prominent enough to become the OED's 'word of the
year 2013', it's probably tech worth investing in. Kids, eh?
First Impressions
We can't yet tell whether the Desire 816 might be let down by a
flimsy-feeling body, but my first take is positive. I like the colours, I
like the look, and including BoomSound speakers on a lower-cost,
large-screen phone is an excellent addition. We'll look to get an HTC
Desire 816 in for a proper assessment soon.
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