THE GOOD The Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime has LTE and front and rear cameras that turn out decent photos.
THE BAD Its low screen resolution makes videos and games look pixelated, and download speeds are on the slow side.
THE BOTTOM LINE Feature-rich
cameras and an attractive build help push Cricket's prepaid Samsung
Galaxy Grand Prime past other budget rivals that also cost under $200.
considering that premium phones like the fully featured Samsung Galaxy S6 start
at around $600, it's pretty amazing what a sub-$200 handset like the
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime can do given its budget specs.
For
$180 from prepaid carrier (and AT&T subsidiary) Cricket, the Grand
Prime brings you in one of the more decked-out phones of this price
tier: a 5-inch screen, 8-megapixel rear camera, 5-megapixel front-facing
camera and 1,080p HD video capture.
Now,
the deal isn't quite so great on Sprint, which will sell the Grand
Prime starting July 10 for $240 all-in, or $30 with a two-year service
agreement. Buyers can also spread out payments for $10 per month for 24
months.
You're still getting last season's Android (4.4
KitKat), and lower-end hardware -- like a smaller battery and limited
storage -- that help Samsung hit that low price point. While there are
several worthy competitors in this space, read this review (or skip to
the conclusion) to find out why the Galaxy Grand Prime tops the class.
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Design and build
Like
a lot of recent budget handsets these days, the Galaxy Grand Prime
manages to come across as attractive and approachable without looking
"cheap." Its glossy off-white face pairs with a pearlescent back cover.
Silver accents rim the perimeter, home button and camera mount.
Samsung
likes to place the power/lock button on the right spine, which balances
out the volume rocker on the left, the Micro-USB charging port down
below and the headset jack up top. Its camera lens sits in the middle of
the back, with the LED flash to the left. The front-facing lens roosts
on the right side of the phone above the screen.
Popping
off the back cover reveals the Micro-SIM card holder. To slide in a
microSD card, however, you'll have to first pull out the battery.
Circling
back to the screen, you'll find it bordered by a white bezel and rimmed
with a thin deep black frame. That's because the TFT screen itself
appears light gray. The resolution is incredibly low for a screen this
large -- 960x540 pixels compared with the 2014 Moto G's 1,280x720p resolution.
Its
comparatively low pixel density won't ruin basic text reading and
social networking on the Galaxy Grand Prime, but it does render the
screen especially dim in bright sunlight and makes fingerprint smudges
harder to ignore. More importantly, photos will lose some crispness and
detail, and those resource-heavy videos and games, like music videos and
movie trailers, often look choppy and pixelated.
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OS and apps
An
Android 4.4 KitKat phone, the Grand Prime isn't as up-to-date as
Android 5.0 Lollipop, but it's still fast and has critical features like
Google Now.
The
version of Samsung's TouchWiz layer that the phone uses on top of
Android is a little more basic that it would be on other devices. For
instance, there's no automatic brightness gauge and no gesture support,
though you can still print from the Grand Prime and turn on
ultra-power-saving mode to stretch the last of your battery reserves to
hours; there's also NFC.
Preloaded
apps are a reality for any phone you buy through a carrier, though the
Galaxy Grand Prime's preinstall haul is surprisingly lean. Cricket's
complement of management apps meets a few Samsung titles, like Milk (for
music) and a folder for Galaxy Apps. Besides that, you'll get the usual
Google basics.
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Camera quality
The Grand Prime's shooter goes head to head with the Motorola Moto G (2014),
and edges it out thanks to higher resolutions for both the video and
selfie lens. For this price point, decent 8-megapixel photo captures are
about the best you can expect, and that's what you get.
Autofocus
is immeasurably helpful, although not every photo came out focused.
I'll accept a certain amount of user error for that, but some pictures
were unexpectedly blurry, even with the lens wiped clean. These are
images that looked clear on the phone screen, but woefully the opposite
when opened on the computer monitor. Shots taken outdoors or in natural
light looked the best, with the quality degrading in low-light pictures.
Although
resolution goes up to 8 megapixels, the native app defaults to 6
megapixels. You'll need to manually change that. Samsung includes
important modes like panorama and HDR, along with burst and night modes,
and a tool that lets you use the rear camera to take a self-portrait.
Video captured at 1080p HD and played back smoothly, with focus adjusting as the scene changed.
If
it's effects and filters you want, you'll need to download a photo
editor. Strangely, Samsung didn't preload this, but there is a shortcut
within the camera app to download the Samsung editor. Otherwise, you can
use any other third-party app.
Samsung
has thrown a lot into selfies for this device. You can trigger the
front-facing camera with your palm or voice command (like "cheese").
Multiple modes mean you can also set up a wide selfie for a larger
group, or create an animated GIF. Three separate sliders let you
artificially adjust the degree of airbrushing, facial slimness and the
size of your eyes. You know, if that's your thing.
Image
quality was so-so for the selfie, which isn't always terrible depending
on how detailed you like those portraits. I noticed that even with the
airbrushing turned totally off, the Grand Prime's front-facing camera
still imparted some of that soft effect.
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Hardware performance
Considering
its hardware limitations, the Galaxy Grand Prime is a good little
performer. It booted up in about 20 seconds and felt responsive
throughout. The camera launched within a few seconds as well, and
auto-focus kicked in pretty quickly. Photos also rapidly fired.
Perhaps
a combination of the screen and the processor -- quad-core may sound
impressive, but this model is purposely lower-tier -- gameplay on
graphically intense titles wasn't at its peak. The good news is that a
lot of outfits optimize games for budget devices, so graphics are still
engaging, if not the height of perfection.
Since
storage and RAM are so low (this is expected on phones this price),
that provision for a 64GB microSD card slot is going to be very
important for prospective buyers. Storage space is relatively cheap, and
a card gives you a place to offload your photos, videos, and bigger
games without having to ruthlessly play favorites.
Now, a 2,600mAh battery isn't terribly impressive on its own, but it does top the Motorola Moto G (2014)'s
2,070mAh ticker in capacity and longevity. Motorola's lasted just under
9 hours; this Galaxy Grand Prime averaged 9.5 hours.
In
real-world terms, you're looking at a work day on a fully charged
battery, though you'll want to top it up midway through if you're
planning to use it into the night without stopping to recharge.
Unlike
the highest-end Samsung phones, this juice pack doesn't charge
especially fast, so you'll need to plan on long stretches of refueling
time if you deplete it during the day. I'd personally invest in an extra
charger for work in addition to one for home.
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Call quality and data
First,
the disclaimer. I tested the Galaxy Grand Prime here in San Francisco
on Cricket's network, which also mostly uses AT&T's network, it's
parent, as well.
Call
quality was pretty good during my tests. I made appointments and
conducted interviews, speaking for an average of 15 minutes per phone
call. No calls dropped and I didn't hear major interruptions during the
hustle and bustle of the day.
Put
the phone in a quiet environment and listen for flaws, and you'll find
them. Like many other Samsung phones, in noisy scenarios, you may want
more volume than this one gives you. Just beware that the tucked-away
extra volume booster amplifies every background crackle and hiss, not
just voice audio. Speakerphone, while acceptable, echoes (although they
all do to some degree).
A
word on data speeds. The Grand Prime supports 2.4GHz Wi-Fi networks
rather than the much faster 5GHz technology. While this means slower
Wi-Fi overall, good sites and apps optimize their pages to load quickly,
so in real-life situations, you shouldn't notice unbearable delay.
The
same goes for 4G speeds, to a point. Sites resolved in acceptable
lengths on time, and photos and video uploaded and downloaded without
incident. It's true that diagnostic test results in Speedtest.net did
show much slower speeds than I'm used to with LTE. I saw double digits
for upload speeds, but only single digits for download speeds, which
usually register in the double digits for AT&T in San Francisco.
Te
results could be a product of the kind of LTE radio used in the Grand
Prime, or possibly the way AT&T maintains Cricket's network. It's
very likely a combination of the two.
You
should view these results as yet more proof of this handset's rank in
the pyramid. In the end, I was able to do everything I wanted to online.
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Buy it or skip it
The
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime is worth buying for Cricket's price (and a
little less so for Sprint's $240 cost), but do your homework first;
there's some strong competition in this under-$200 price range.
If you're looking to pay less, the Motorola Moto E 4G LTE is
far more entry level across the board, but also costs much less ($130
retail, and closer to $80 on current promotions). That phone sells at
Cricket and Boost Mobile.
For a larger device, the 5.7-inch Boost Max costs a bit less ($150 at the time of this review), but also has a slightly older version of the Android OS and a weaker front-facing camera (1 megapixel rather than 5).
T-Mobile's closest rival, the now-$150 LG Optimus L90 , has stepped-down camera specs (5 and 1 megapixels) and less storage space, though it does support Wi-Fi calling.
My other suggestion, if you're willing to pop into the $250 bracket, is Alcatel's new OneTouch Idol 3 , which delivers beefier specs for the camera, screen and processor and delivers strong value.
Still,
the Grand Prime's LTE functionality and better-performing 5-megapixel
lens up front push this phone past its sub-$200 rivals, including its
closest competitor, the likable Motorola Moto G (2014). Also priced at $180, the Moto G has
a higher screen resolution and similarly performing rear camera, though
its 3G-only status is a personal deal breaker. Cricket's Grand Prime
would be my pick of the litter, though if you're thinking of spending
$240 for Sprint's version, the $250 unlockedAlcatel OneTouch Idol 3 is a stronger contender.
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