The "1-Minute" Review
Verdict
Reviewers felt the Pixel 4 made a few too many compromises while trying to do too many things. For the price, it fails to excel in any one area over similarly priced competitors. Unless you’re looking for fast updates, reviews show you might want to look elsewhere.What's good
- Excellent display
- Respectable performance
- Great camera
- Premium design
What's bad
- No 4K60 video
- Slow facial recognition
- No 3.5mm to USB adapter
- Price
- Weak battery
Google touts its Pixel phone series as the ideal mix of hardware and software, providing a pure Android experience, rapid updates, and features not found on other smartphones. However, the competition in the mid- and high-tier phone market continues to innovate and redefine the mobile experience, does the Pixel 4 offer a compelling experience for its high-end price?
Let’s see what reviewers around the Internet have to say...
Design
Reviewers loved the latest design from Google. The IP68-rated glass and aluminum chassis provides a premium feel and the rear camera bump is visually noticeable but doesn’t cause issues when laying the phone on a flat surface.
The black variant features a glossy back panel which comes with the usual complaints of slippery grips and fingerprints everywhere. However, the orange and white variants offer a soft-touch finish which reviewers loved.
Ars Technica praised the grippier soft-touch coating, saying, “The back provides an agreeable amount of grip that you don't get with regular glass. It looks great, it stays clean, and it seems durable.”
Reviewers all agree this is the best Pixel phone design yet.
Display
As one of the major features promoted by Google, the 5.7-inch 90Hz P-OLED display running at 1080-by-2280 pixels was a mixed bag with reviewers.
For the typical specs -- color reproduction, viewing angles, clarity, and outdoor visibility -- the phone fares fine. However, the 90Hz mode which works to make the screen feel smoother didn’t impress most reviewers. This is because Google disables the feature in mid- to low-light situations. So if the refresh rate is a big selling point for you, know it might be disabled most of the time depending on your environment.
Proportions were another common complaint. The phone has nearly non-existent bezels on the sides and bottom of the phone. However, the top of the phone houses NIR sensors which power the facial recognition and motion gesture features and the phone’s camera, making for an odd look to some.
Worse still the facial recognition and gesture controls received a lot of criticism. Experts found the unlocking slow and wished for a fingerprint reader in their reviews. The gesture controls fared better. However, many reviewers noted inconsistent response to even the basic gestures on offer.
Ars Technica said, “In reality, the Pixel 4's face unlock is slow, inconsistent, and frustrating to use. Security issues were discovered almost immediately. It's an across-the-board regression compared to a fingerprint reader and a big downside to the Pixel 4.”
Performance
Powered by a 2.84Ghz octa-core Snapdragon 855 processor paired with 6GB of RAM, the phone offers enough power to run the most demanding apps or the latest graphics-intensive games. While it’s not the absolute newest processor available in 2019, it’s plenty capable and reviews indicate the phone runs nice and snappy with no overheating issues or odd performance quirks.
Yet, there are more powerful options available for a similar price. GSM Arena summarizes common reviewer opinions well, saying, “... The Pixel is reasonably powerful, but it's bested by most other high-end phones in both peak and sustained performance. If you want a phone for heavy gaming, this is not it but it should do just fine for most every day scenarios.”
Software
As Google’s headlining phone, the phone ships with the latest version of Android (10) with guaranteed updates to October 2022. Google stages its rollouts, so you might not receive an update the moment it is released. However, in most cases you should see the updates come through within a week or two of release -- faster than many third-party Android phones offer.
Storage
Storage was a point of contention in reviews. The phone comes in 64 or 128GB variants and there is no microSD support. If you plan to store a lot of media for offline playback, install multiple games, or record hours of video, you’ll want to spring for the larger storage option since you cannot expand it.
Cameras
Pixel cameras lead the pack for high-end Android phone cameras. The Pixel 4 is no exception with its dual rear camera with 12MP wide-angle lens and 16MP telephoto lens for 2x optical zoom. If you’re a fan of selfies or vlogging, there is also a front-facing 8MP wide-angle lens.
Reviewers praised the camera quality and the software’s easy use. Zooming is as simple as tapping the screen and the phones Live HDR+ feature means on-screen previews truly reflect what you’ll see in the final image.
There’s even an astrophotography mode to take pictures of the stars -- though it’ll require a tripod for clear shots.
While the phone might not have a huge range of lenses like much of the competition, reviews indicate it keeps up just fine thanks to excellent software optimization.
Mobile Syrup loved the camera’s performance, saying, “As a photographer, the Pixel 3 was a phone I could trust. The narrower focal length did limit it in some respects, but I could count on its image quality. That trend continues with the Pixel 4, which is still among the best in the business.”
Battery Life [H4]
Battery life is the single biggest weakness of the Pixel 4. It includes a scant 2,800mAh battery -- far below what you’ll find in similarly specced phones. Reviewers had trouble getting the phone through a full day on a single charge with moderate to heavy use.
Notebook Check had a similar experience to most reviewers, saying, “Power users should thus consider carrying around a power bank or giving it a quick top-up whenever possible.”
Fortunately, with USB Type-C fast charging and Qi wireless fast charging, keeping your phone topped up isn’t too difficult. But if you’re looking for a phone you can take off the charger in the morning and not worry about until bed that night, the Pixel 4 is not it.
Audio
As with many of the latest phones, the Pixel 4 features stereo speakers but lacks a 3.5mm headphone jack. Reviewers found the speakers respectable but disliked the fact that Google did not include a 3.5mm-to-USB adapter with the phone. So if you want to use your favorite cans to enjoy movies or music, count on spending a little extra to get an adapter.
DXOMark put the phone through its paces and noted, “[The Pixel 4 is] among the three best Android devices ... outperforming such heavyweight competitors as the current Samsung flagships and the OnePlus 7 Pro. For music lovers and avid videographers of family and friends, the Pixel 4 should deliver more than satisfying results.”
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The Takeaway
Overall, reviews for the phone are mixed. On one hand, it’s more than capable of running the latest apps and games, includes an excellent display, and feels premium in the hand. On the other, it’s a hassle to unlock and battery life is near -- if not at -- the bottom of the charts for mid- to high-tier phones in 2019. Pair that with a price tag well toward the upper end of the charts and reviewers have a hard time recommending the Pixel 4. Those that did still recommended the larger Pixel 4 XL instead.
Ars Technica didn’t hold back, declaring, “The Pixel 4 isn't bad in a vacuum, but the rest of Google's Android competition gets better every year, while Google stands still. This year, Google turned in a weak, timid update to its flagship smartphone, and I'm not sure who to recommend this to at [this price.]”
TechWeLike found the phone a bit of a compromise, noting, “It’s not the best bang for your buck, so you really have to enjoy the clean Android experience, the killer camera, and deal with the subpar battery life to go for the Pixel 4.”
Android Central says, “The Pixel 4 ends up feeling like it's trapped between multiple quantum states. A phone with some jaw-dropping technologies that has to service too many agendas, and lacks the singular focus or vision to be what everyone really wants it to be.”
What the Critics Are Saying...
- James Peckham, TechRadarIf you’re in the market for one of the very best camera phones out there, the Pixel 4 should be at or close to the top of your list. If you’re looking for an all-round feature-packed phone, you may be a bit disappointed, and the battery life is mediocre at best, but it’s a solidly built device with...
- Richard Goodwin, Know Your MobileI wanted to love this phone, and in some respects I do, but it isn’t the update I was expecting. Prior to getting this phone, I thought it’d be a big step forward from the Pixel 3 XL. But Google instead decided to go a different direction, an incremental one, that doesn’t really add anything all tha...
- Kellen, Droid LifeThe camera is still Pixel-quality, the design is still pretty fresh, and the software remains my favorite in all of Android. I still don’t use Motion Sense, the specs are average, and the price is arguably too high, unless these $300 discounts stick around for the long haul. Instead, I figured I’d t...
- David McCourt, AndroidPITThe Pixel 4 is still a cracking compact smartphone, and one that is constantly being updated with cool new features, but Google is falling behind the pack in terms of hardware. It's not just Samsung, Huawei, and Apple that are leaving Mountain View behind, but the second-tier manufacturers like Oppo...
- Ryan Whitwam, The WirecutterThe Pixel 4 is the fastest phone we’ve ever tested, and the camera bests that of every other Android phone. It also has guaranteed updates until October 2022. Its battery life is mediocre, but it's water resistant, it supports wireless charging, and it has a glass back rather than plastic.
Prices (Where to Buy)
Common Questions
Google backs up the Pixel 4 with a 1 Year parts & labour warranty.
If your Pixel 4 has problems and is still within its warranty period, you could contact Google support or the retailer you purchased the phone from. You'll find Google's contact information here. If your phone is off warranty and needs repair for a physical problem such as a broken screen or bad battery, you should visit an authorized service centre or a local phone repair shop. You can also connect with others in The Informr Community Forum to find and share answers to questions.
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