Samsung Galaxy Young review
Now under £50, is the Galaxy Young a crazy bargain?
Specifications
Android 4.1 (JellyBean), 3.3in 320×480 display
The Galaxy Young is one of the cheapest Android phones we’ve seen, having dropped from around £90 when we first reviewed it last year to just under £50 today. This may look extremely tempting and, frankly, for a throwaway phone it’s not a bad deal. But as you’ll see from our review, there are quite a lot of sacrifices you’ll have to make for not spending £30 or £40 more.
You get a good-looking phone for your money, which feels well made. We like the soft-touch plastic on the rear, which is similar to that of the Galaxy S3 and S4, and the silver sides manage to make the phone look classy rather than tacky. The Young is a compact handset, with a small 3.3in screen, but is a relatively chunky 12mm thick. We liked the extra thickness, as it meant we could keep a firm grip on the handset despite its small width and height.
Like many budget phones, the Young has a 320×480-pixel screen. For Android to look its razor-sharp best we like to see a minimum of 480×800 pixels, and the Galaxy Young’s text is slightly on the blurry side. There’s also a significant amount of grain, but the screen is certainly usable.
The Young runs Android 4.1 Jelly Bean. We’re used to the latest versions of Android running as smooth as silk, and the operating system runs well on the Galaxy Young – at least on the surface. The app tray comes up quickly and the animation to flick between app trays is smooth, but it’s when you open an app that the limitations of the phone’s single-core 1GHz processor start to show.
In the Chrome web browser, the BBC News website took nine seconds to render, while most dual-core smartphones can render the page in five. Scrolling around pages is far jerkier than we’re used to, and there’s a second or so delay between tapping in the address box and the keyboard appearing. The Maps app is also especially slow, especially when new tiles are loading, which makes scrolling around a chore.
The slow performance is backed up the Sunspider JavaScript benchmark; the phone completed the test in a very slow 3,203ms. The phone’s slow speed does give it one particular advantage; good battery life. In our continuous video playback test, we saw nearly nine hours from the Young’s 1,300mAh battery.
Core phone functions such as messaging are less of a problem. There is a bit of a delay between pressing a key on the on-screen keyboard and the letter appearing, but accurate typing is helped by the keyboard’s sensible design; each key is small but spaced far apart from the others, so fat fingers don’t struggle with the screen’s low resolution.
We were impressed with the phone’s five-megapixel camera, which managed to resolve a surprising amount of detail from its three megapixels in outdoor shots, and compared favourably with the Samsung Galaxy S3’s camera, which we tend to use for our reference. However, like the S3, the Galaxy Young struggles with exposure in bright conditions, meaning that the sky is more likely to be a bleached-out white than something with texture and clouds. Photos taken in low light show plenty of noise, but again, are reasonably impressive considering the phone’s low price.
Not bad on the detail front, but the camera struggles with exposure in bright conditions
The phone’s slow speed does give it one particular advantage; good battery life. In our continuous video playback test, we saw nearly nine hours from the Young’s 1,300mAh battery.
CONCLUSION
When we first saw the Samsung Galaxy Young it was among the cheapest Android smartphones we’d seen at just £90. Now you can pick one up for as little as £50 from Tesco Mobile. That makes it very cheap, even by today’s standards, but is it worth buying?
The Galaxy Young has a very basic spec. The screen has just a measly 320×480 resolution and it only has a single-core 1GHz processor, though it does run Android 4.1 pretty smoothly. Webpages are slow to load and you won’t see much at that resolution anyway.
A good alternative would be the Windows-powered Nokia Lumia 530. It’s around the same price and you get a better screen and marginally better performance, as well as lovely bright colours to boot.
However, if you can stretch your budget, you really should. The £90 Motorola Moto E is a great budget choice and while the upfront cost is nearly double that of the Galaxy Young, it’s significantly better future-proofed thanks to a better screen, camera, battery and processor, so over the course of two or more years you won’t feel tempted to trade it in, unlike the Young, whose performance will possibly frustrate from the moment you buy it.
Details | |
---|---|
Price | £116 |
Rating | *** |
Hardware | |
Main display size | 3.3in |
Native resolution | 320×480 |
CCD effective megapixels | 3-megapixel |
GPS | yes |
Internal memory | 1536MB |
Memory card support | microSD |
Memory card included | 0MB |
Operating frequencies | GSM 850/900/1800/1900, 3G 900/2100 |
Wireless data | HSDPA |
Size | 109x59x12mm |
Weight | 112g |
Features | |
Operating system | Android 4.1 (JellyBean) |
Microsoft Office compatibility | Word, Excel, PowerPoint |
FM Radio | yes |
Accessories | headphones, data cable, charger |
Talk time | 7 hours |
Standby time | 10 days |
Buying Information | |
SIM-free price | £116 |
Price on contract | 0 |
Prepay price | £90 |
SIM-free supplier | www.ballicom.co.uk |
Contract/prepay supplier | www.o2.co.uk |
Details | www.samsung.co.uk |