Final Words

Mid range devices in the $200-300 range are more interesting than devices at the low end of the smartphone market because there's more room for OEMs to prioritize some features over others in order to differentiate their device. With low end devices it's often the same story of a Snapdragon 400/410 SoC with 1GB of RAM, 8GB of NAND, a 5MP or possibly an 8MP camera, and a qHD display. In the mid range market OEMs can choose to spend more money on certain areas to improve the experience, whether that be a faster SoC, a better display, better build quality, or better cameras. The P8 Lite represent's Huawei's view on what features are most important in a mid range device.

Build quality is definitely an area of focus on the P8 Lite. The chassis feels sturdy, and it feels fairly good in the hand. At 7.7mm thick it's also much thinner than many other low end and mid range devices, although this results in a compromise on battery capacity. As for the design side of things, I'm personally not the biggest fan due to the metal band around the edges. While I don't know how many people will share this view, I'm disappointed that a single design element ends up ruining the appearance of the phone for me.

The 5.0" 1280x720 display on the P8 Lite is definitely one of its weaker aspects. The calibration is just not near as good as it should be, especially with devices in the sub-$200 bracket becoming very accurate. At 5" the 720p resolution has decent sharpness, but I find myself longing for the 5.5" 1080p panel on the Zenfone 2 which is only $199. Since the display is something you look at all day, Huawei really needs to improve in this area by eliminating the blue shift in the greyscale and improving general color accuracy.

As for performance, Snapdragon 615 is really the best you're going to get at this price point unless you go with the Zenfone 2 which is something of an anomaly in many ways. Huawei is using the bin with the big cluster of A53 cores clocking up to 1.5GHz rather than 1.7GHz like in the HTC One M8s, but it still has significant performance improvements over Snapdragon 400 and 410 in low end devices. There would be even greater gains on the CPU side if it was operating in AArch64 mode, but with the P8 Lite shipping with KitKat it's forced to operate in AArch32 mode. I really don't feel it's acceptable to be shipping any devices with KitKat this late into 2015, as it has performance issues and uses Android's older Dalvik runtime.

The GPU shows even more substantial improvements than the CPU, with performance being anywhere from 1.5x to 3x faster than Adreno 305/306. As far as memory goes, the additional gigabyte of RAM also helps to keep things running smoothly, but NAND quality is definitely an area Huawei needs to continue to improve on. Both random and sequential reads and writes are as slow or slower than the Moto E which at times sells for less than half the price of the P8 Lite. It's hard to say how much of an impact this will have with the workload of a typical P8 Lite buyer, but there's certainly no reason not to improve on areas where devices fall short.

The 13MP rear-facing camera is where the P8 Lite really shines. Shots that aren't taken in the middle of the night end up being better than any other device I've seen at this price point. Much of this is owed to the well balanced processing that Huawei applies to images. Once you get into extreme low light there tends to be a dramatic loss of detail due to excessive noise reduction, and I think image quality would be substantially improved if Huawei would tone it down a few notches when taking photos in the dark.

The quality of videos recorded on the P8 ends up falling short compared to the still image quality. Even with a fairly high bitrate for 1080p video, there's just an overall lack of detail in every frame. Fixed focus also means that there's often blurriness when pointing the camera to new areas, and Huawei needs to work out whatever issues are occurring with the right channel audio recording.

The last important aspect to cover is battery life, and unfortunately this is where the P8 Lite really let me down. The P8 Lite's battery life is unimpressive in our web browsing benchmark, and the very short time in PCMark's battery test just confirms something I continually noticed when using the phone which is that the battery life is too short during general use. This problem is made worse by a very long charge time, which means that the phone dies quickly and takes a long time to be back up and running. Since the P8 Lite doesn't deliver on battery life, I don't know why users wouldn't instead purchase something like the ASUS Zenfone 2 unless they really want the P8's camera quality or smaller size.

Ultimately, there are no bad phones, just bad prices. The P8 Lite wouldn't be a bad recommendation if it was priced a bit lower and received an update to Lollipop. While I don't know if it would be possible for Huawei to reach a price of $150, I would need the P8 Lite to be priced somewhere below $200 before I could really recommend it. At this time there are simply better options in the $200-300 range, and so at its current price point the P8 Lite is a phone I find difficult to recommend.

Battery Life and Charge Time
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  • ileben - Tuesday, August 4, 2015 - link

    Again, please, post a graph of performance over time for a 20 minute intensive run (ala T-Rex).
    Also, performance degradation should be expressed as a ratio of [final run] / [cold run].
  • NAdeera - Wednesday, August 26, 2015 - link

    Can anybody tell me about the battery time
  • stampede84 - Thursday, July 21, 2016 - link

    Is it possible to charge Huawei with 2A chargers ? Will it break my phone or does the charging time will remain the same ?
  • KilonBerlin - Friday, August 21, 2020 - link

    how the flock can the P8 be last in fps with only 8.71 fps and the P8 lite (a lot cheaper version) has 23.40? That would be like my current P30 Lite would kick the P30 Pro heavy in GPU testing?! People who said Huawei has no chance, maybe in the US where it was stopped early (most companies were not allowed to offer it with contracts and contracts made up over 80% of sales in 2017 when I did read about first US sanctions on Huawei)
  • KilonBerlin - Friday, August 21, 2020 - link

    It sold so well in Eurasia that the first sanctions they (Apple, US industry in this business and trump, for him every deal is unfair if america has no large advantage or has to compete with countries like china) hoped its done with, than that google thing, people like me and millions others still buyed the phones, now we know "they" were the last huawei with google services, P40 and other news (Mate 30?! or 40?) come without and I only play 1 game right now on my phone, its the well known Asphalt 9: Legends, I downloaded it somehow via AppGallery from Huawei and I because of that dont play with my google account but with huawei account but have no problem with that, most players come from China, India and some asian countries and than russia/europe and the rest of the world^^

    its very unfair and I never ever will buy the apple...but I knew that already before they released smartphones, apple just suck, next phone wont be huawei except the appgallery continue to grow and most new games will also be available there (china/asia is a huge market and Huawei was just the largest smartphone company in the world due to corona weak sales in the US/"West" from Apple and Samsung also weakened a bit, this wont hold but I dont think Google and the companies want to give up all that possible customers with growing income and in china but also (at least before the P40 or other non-google phones were released) in countries like russia huawei really had large shares, P20 lite was the best selling phone of the month (by numbers ofc) in June or July 2018 in Germany,

    offering always lite, normal and pro versions, and maybe they use other names in india or vietnam but the lite version should be affordable for most, especially if its subsidied by a 1 or 2 year internet contract which doesn't cost a fortune there like in Germany where already in 2000 the mobile data frequencies were sold for unbelievable 100 billion D-Mark to the 6 leading mobile companies (16.66 billion DM each!), in the UK a comparable auction only brought a few billion by the 4 largest companies also around that time,

    lets hope when trump is removed the relations between Europe and the US get better and maybe they even see that its a cheap way to destroy Huawei who was/is standing for the success of the chinese state, but the producers of ARM-SoC's are in US hands and even the only alternative from Taiwan had been told if they deliver chips to huawei they can forget all contracts with US companies or to the US... thats trumps "fair trade", like they threat small companies finishing the Nord Stream 2 Pipeline...it gives Russia and Germany another advantage in gas, which in this 2nd offshore pipeline would be for exports only from Germany that trump wants to use for exporting the flood of shale gas, the boom started in 2011, planing even a while before but trump becoming president in 2017 said it were his great actions...

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