Final Words

The Nexus 5X certainly isn't a perfect device. It's not meant to be a flagship phone and it's not priced like one; at $379 it's not the most expensive phone out there, but it's not exactly the cheapest one either. Still, I find myself really liking it despite its flaws. I definitely have a soft spot in my heart for the original Nexus 5, and I was quite disappointed when it didn't receive a true successor last year.

This year's 5X certainly is a true successor, but not every aspect delivers the improvements you would expect from a two year gap between releases. The performance isn't where you'd expect it to be, and Google's stance on disk encryption continues to reduce NAND performance. For all the things the 5X gets wrong though, it gets many other things really right. As always, it's nice to gather everything together in order to decide if a device is worth purchasing.

The design of the 5X is an interesting evolution of the LG Nexus industrial design. It's not as angular as the Nexus 5, but it's still very much a Nexus phone. The design delivered everything I expected from a successor to the Nexus 5, and I like it very much for what it is. The size of the phone is definitely pushing it for me, and I would opt for the size of the Nexus 5 if I had that option, but I also happen to struggle more than most people do with large devices. At $379 there's not much more you can realistically ask for than what the 5X's design and build quality offers.

The 5X's display is awesome, and there's really not much more that needs to be said. The Nexus 5 had a pretty good display for the time, but the 5X definitely takes the calibration and color reproduction to the next level. There's no more messed up low gamma curve, so the display doesn't have the washed out appearance that some people complained about with the Nexus 5's display. Brightness has also been boosted, and contrast is significantly higher too. I really couldn't ask for any more from an IPS LCD panel, and compared to what we got with last year's Nexus 6 the 5X is a breath of fresh air.

Performance is definitely an interesting case. To be frank, the 5X just isn't that much faster in many scenarios than the Nexus 5 was because of the heavy throttling. There's certainly improvement, but it's not what you would expect from two years of SoC progress. Snapdragon 808's heavy throttling means that for any task that taxes the CPU for over a couple of minutes you'd probably be better off with Snapdragon 801, and most certainly better off with 805. It's disappointing, but certainly forgivable when your device costs $379.

As for the GPU performance, Adreno 418 provides a healthy uplift in performance over Adreno 330, and beats Qualcomm's estimates which is great. What's interesting is that the Nexus 6 actually ends up pulling ahead despite being an older phone, which is just the result of how Qualcomm's GPUs were put onto their SoC roadmap. For $379 I think the GPU performance is solid, and there shouldn't be any problems running GPU intensive apps and games from Google Play.

NAND performance is definitely a big area of concern. I don't want to keep beating the issue to death, but Google needs to change their strategy here or they're going to fall very far behind in this regard and there will be no way to catch back up. Devices like the Galaxy S6, and even more so the iPhone 6s have shown how fast NAND speeds can reduce load times, reduce app install times, enable new camera abilities, and do many other things to improve the user experience. The gap between the storage performance of the LG G4 and the Nexus 5X is significant in size despite the two phones using the same NAND solution, and the end result is just completely unacceptable. On top of that, the use of the application processor to perform encryption has an enormous power penalty compared to a dedicated AES engine, which means there are potential battery life improvements just being left on the table.

That said, battery life on the Nexus 5X is quite good, although one should definitely note that the performance the Nexus 5X achieves in tests like BaseMark OS II's battery benchmark is behind that of competing devices that don't use Snapdragon 808 or 810. While it's a bit difficult to weigh these two things, it's essentially a question of whether or not it's worth it for a device to last for a long time when the performance over that period of time wouldn't have provided an enjoyable experience. In the end I think if you need the absolute best performance you're probably not going to opt for a non-flagship phone like the Nexus 5X anyway, and the battery life provided is more than adequate for the average user that will purchase it.

The last major thing to talk about is the camera. This is definitely a home run for Google. After a long period of n-1 cameras, or cameras that were up to par but lacking in processing, we finally get a Nexus device with an awesome camera. Both during the day and at night the quality was better than any of the other devices I used for comparisons, which included the previous two Nexus phones, the Galaxy S6 Edge, and the iPhone 6s. Low light was definitely the biggest victory, although I suspect that the Galaxy Note5 would come closer to the 5X than the S6 Edge does due to the improvements Samsung made to their image processing. In any case, the camera is as good as the flagship devices I've used, which is astonishing for a $379 device. The only drawbacks are the lack of OIS which contributes to shakier video than the previous Nexus phones put out, and the reliance on Google's HDR+ mode to achieve good results which puts a significant delay between shots and could introduce greater blurring in some circumstances. Even with those issues, I really love the Nexus 5X's camera, and it's become my everyday Android phone because of it.

Ultimately, the Nexus 5X is a true successor to the Nexus 5, and for $379 you really can't go wrong when buying one. You're getting a great display, a great camera, a great fingerprint scanner, good battery life, and a chassis that is most definitely plastic, but without any of the flex you see on cheaper devices. For me the camera alone sets the 5X apart from anything else in its price bracket, but pretty much every aspect of it is ahead of the competition at this price point unless you're willing to take a look at imports from Chinese manufacturers, which come with a whole host of other concerns regarding the warranty and network compatibility. The Nexus 5X definitely makes some tradeoffs in order to hit its price target, but if you're looking for a smartphone priced between $300 and $400 I highly recommend you take a look at the Nexus 5X.

Android Marshmallow and Nexus Imprint
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  • Brandon Chester - Sunday, November 15, 2015 - link

    There are additional sentences in that paragraph.
  • Klug4Pres - Monday, November 16, 2015 - link

    True, but the main issue is that it is using "3 of its 4 cores most of the time", so these are the exact same cores that oscillate between 1 GHz and 1.6 GHz, yet you refer to them as "the other three". You are seeking to imply that the idle fourth core is what is "other" relative to the active three, but since you have not explicitly introduced the idle fourth core in what you have written, this does not work and just confuses the reader.

    As for "the key points", unless you manage to refer to them all in this one introductory sentence, it would be better to split the paragraph up, e.g. you can say "There are [n] key points to get from the graphs. Firstly, ... Secondly, ... etc., or you could say "There are a few key points to get from the graphs. With the Snapdragon 800 in the Nexus 5, we see that only 3 of its 4 cores are used most of the time, .... etc
  • Aritra Ghatak - Saturday, November 21, 2015 - link

    @Brandon Chester the CPU throttle plot that you explained for Nexus 5X is it what you would expect from the LG G4 too? I checked LG G4's review although there was no CPU clock frequency v/s time plot there for the G4, but from what I understood it actually manages to give pretty good sustained CPU performance. How is this possible? Could you please explain?
  • bw13121 - Sunday, November 22, 2015 - link

    Ill second that, If there is a noticeable difference in sustained CPU Performance between G4 & N5X, why is this? Cheaper heatsink/cooling assembly? It would be good for an expert to answer this, then again that's probably the reviewer..:)
  • Matsod - Monday, November 23, 2015 - link

    Its a good screen, no doubt. Expect when scrolling, text gets really blurry. Compared side by side with the Nexus 5 its a noticeable difference. Please test, especially if you own both devices, and respond.
  • Jojo99 - Monday, December 21, 2015 - link

    I have a 32GB 5X running 6.0.1. I do not notice that problem.
  • DukeOfAnandTech - Sunday, November 29, 2015 - link

    I loved the previous article showing several test of the headphone output of the phones. Will measurements of this phone be added to that article in the near future? Also, will we be seeing the reviews add a page dedicated to audio output quality at some point?
  • blzd - Monday, November 30, 2015 - link

    Wasn't there a graph showing sustained GPU performance? Was that removed?
  • Derek712 - Thursday, December 3, 2015 - link

    Hi Brandon,

    Do you actually calibrate the display before you test or do you test it right out of the box? My colors are pretty warm out of the box and many online complain about yellowish colors right from the get go. Some have gotten replacement units with cooler whites. I'm wondering if there's anything I can do to correct it other than RMA.
  • Chris2fer - Friday, December 4, 2015 - link

    The 5 was AWESOME. The 5x is awful. I am wondering if reviewers actually spend time with these devices. I will say the camera is decent and the fingerprint readers is great but the phone's performance is actually worse than the 5. My 5x is so laggy its painful to use. About every other day it locks up completely and doesn't respond for about 5min until it reboots.

    STAY AWAY FROM THIS THING!

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