For some time now, Sony has been mostly absent from the US market. While we’ve seen devices here and there, there have been issues with keeping launches aligned, and for the most part by the time an Xperia phone launches in the US it’s already on the verge of being irrelevant as the 6 month launch cycle of Xperia phones in the past meant that slipping by even a few months resulted in noticeable deltas when comparing US and international models.

With the Xperia X, this all changes. Sony finally appears to be taking the US market seriously again, and I’ve spent the last few days using and testing the Xperia X to see just how it stacks up against the competition. The Xperia X is designed to unify the smartphone lineup to some extent, which makes some kind of sense when even I can’t really keep track of all the Sony smartphones other than the Z line. With the Xperia X Performance, X, XA, and XA Ultra there’s some semblance of sanity to the lineup. The X proper represents the high-end, while the XA line represents the mid-range.

While the astute readers may have noticed that we have tested Xperia phones before, we’ve never done a true review of one. To start reviewing the Xperia X, we can start with the usual spec sheet.

  Sony Xperia X Sony Xperia X Performance
SoC Snapdragon 650
2x Cortex-A72 @ 1.8Ghz
4x Cortex-A53 @ 1.4GHz
Adreno 510

(TSMC 28HPm)
Snapdragon 820
2x Kryo @ 2.15GHz
2x Kryo @ 1.6GHz
Adreno 530

(Samsung 14LPP)
RAM 3GB LPDDR3 3GB LPDDR4
NAND 32/64GB NAND + microSD 32/64GB NAND + microSD
Display 5” 1080p
Triluminos LCD
5” 1080p
Triluminos LCD
Network 2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Category 7 LTE) 2G / 3G / 4G LTE (Category 6/9 LTE)
Dimensions 142.7 x 69.4 x 7.9mm, 153g 143.7 x 70.4 x 8.7mm, 164g
Camera 23MP Rear Facing w/ EIS, f/2.0, 1.12µm, 1/2.3" 23MP Rear Facing w/ EIS, f/2.0, 1.12µm, 1/2.3"
13MP Front Facing, f/2.0, 1.12µm 13MP Front Facing, f/2.0, 1.12µm
Battery 2620 mAh (10.09 Whr) 2700 mAh (10.4 Whr)
OS Android 6 w/ Xperia UI
(At Launch)
Android 6 w/ Xperia UI
(At Launch)
Connectivity 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, BT 4.2,
USB2.0,GPS/GLONASS, NFC
802.11a/b/g/n/ac, BT 4.2,
USB2.0,GPS/GLONASS, NFC
Fingerprint Sensor Capacitive (non-US only) Capacitive (non-US only)
SIM NanoSIM NanoSIM

At a high level, the Xperia X is a well-balanced phone due to the 5” display, large camera sensor, but for the most part it’s a decidedly upper-mid-range phone. For the most part it’s pretty much a high-end phone other than the SoC, which is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 650 SoC. For those unfamiliar with this SoC I would refer to our previous coverage on these SoCs for a high level overview. The battery does appear to be on the small side, but given the overall size and display size it’s in line with expectation. At first glance, the only real concern I have is the camera, as Sony lists this camera to have a 24mm equivalent focal length. While I try to keep an open mind with these things, this immediately jumps out as something concerning.

Of course, while spec sheets can give some idea for what to expect, there is a whole ocean of implementation details going from a spec sheet to an actual phone. To start, we can look at the design of the Xperia X, which is clearly an evolution of the Omni-Balance design that was first seen with the original Xperia Z. If you’ve used the Xperia Z3, the Xperia X will probably be quite familiar in feel, but instead of an aluminum frame and glass back, the Xperia X uses a plastic frame and an aluminum back that appears to have a sand-blasted anodized finish. I do have to admit it is a bit disappointing to me that Sony didn’t go all the way with an aluminum unibody design here, but it does feel easier to grip than the rather slippery Xperia Z3.

The plastic frame also has sensible button and port placement, which is good to see as previous Xperia smartphones were profoundly strange in that respect. The microUSB port is on the bottom of the phone, the combined SIM/microSD tray on the left side when viewed from the front, and the power button is placed high enough that if you hold the phone with your right hand your thumb should be approximately in the correct position to easily access it. This power button also doubles as a fingerprint scanner for international units but not US ones, which has been surprisingly fast when it works and has a firm feel unlike the somewhat loose fingerprint scanner on the LG G5. The volume rocker and two-stage camera button are just below the power button, and for the most part I don’t really have any issues with the placement here. The feel of the buttons is solid here and there’s no creep or take-up before the break. The camera button works, but the feel of the first stage isn’t very consistent as if your finger placement varies it won’t feel the same, and the break of the second stage feels a bit springy if you’re used to something like the Lumia 1020’s camera button.

The front of the phone is very much reminiscent of the Xperia Z3, as the dual front-facing speakers have a similar design and Sony continues to use on screen buttons here which does have a fairly noticeable effect on usable screen space, although I’m not really allowed to tear down the phone to see whether this phone places the display driver at the top to allow for capacitive buttons to increase usable screen space.

Overall, the design of the Xperia X is solid. There’s nothing really wrong with it, although the large amount of bezel on the bottom combined with the on screen buttons means that the typing ergonomics feels somewhat similar to the One M9. The plastic frame with all of its seams is a bit disconcerting for a 550 USD phone, but it doesn’t really have a material impact on in-hand feel. Again, I think an all-aluminum unibody would probably make it feel a lot better, but for what it is I don’t have any complaints.

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  • Lolimaster - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    Yes another high end phone destroyed by pathetic image qualit.

    @Editor

    Fix the 1st tables, your putting the z3v where the X shouldve been.
  • Lolimaster - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    So if you care for screen image quality you basically got 2 options:

    Apple for IPS
    Samsung for OLED

    Nothing else.
  • Spectrophobic - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    Or the Nexus 5X. Too bad the SoC is garbage.
  • zodiacfml - Saturday, June 4, 2016 - link

    The Nexus 5X's SoC is the best option during its time as the Snapdragon 810 and 6P just results to expensive hardware with little benefit.
  • grayson_carr - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    Yep. As someone who prefers LCDs, it pains me that Android phones almost never have high quality, well calibrated LCDs. I bought the Nexus 5X and liked it, but it was decidedly midrange and just didn't excite me. Now I have an S7 Edge, which is good, but I prefer LCD to AMOLED. Might have to bite the bullet and go iPhone 7 Plus if they stick to LCD, but then I'll probably hate iOS still. Arg.
  • fanofanand - Thursday, June 2, 2016 - link

    I looked at the 5X, but not enough storage, not enough RAM, and IMO a poor SOC choice. I ended up buying a lightly used N5 off Swappa, couldn't be happier.
  • Spectrophobic - Thursday, June 2, 2016 - link

    So you were happy with an even more inferior product?
  • Meteor2 - Tuesday, June 7, 2016 - link

    5X is a great phone. Screen is A1; SoC is not in benchmarks but it's fast in real life.
  • Lolimaster - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    And for me thats the most importante thing, if you fail at that you just failed you whole launch.
  • grayson_carr - Tuesday, May 31, 2016 - link

    Man, I can't believe Android OEMs still haven't figured out how to put high quality, well calibrated LCDs into phones in 2016. They're usually either high quality and poorly calibrated or mediocre quality and well calibrated. The Nexus 5X is the best LCD I've seen in an Android phone, and it's a $350 midrange phone! Apple is putting great, well calibrated LCDs in the Plus iPhones. Why can't Android manufacturers do it?

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