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LG V30 Review

Sections

Verdict

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Pros

  • Loads of features
  • Stunning audio
  • The nicest looking LG phone yet

Cons

  • Screen isn't great
  • Stuck on Android 7
  • LG's software is still ugly

Key Specifications

  • Review Price: £799
  • 6-inch quad-HD+ Full Vision display
  • HDR 10 support
  • Snapdragon 835. 4GB RAM
  • 64 or 128GB storage
  • Quad-DAC
  • B&O earbuds
  • Android 7.1.2
  • Log video recording
  • 151.7 x 75.4 x 7.3 mm
  • 3300 mAh battery with wireless charging
  • IP68
  • Black, Blue, Silver and Violet colour options

LG is preparing to launch the G7, according to recent rumours. With that in mind, we’d recommend holding off picking up the V30 until the firm’s next-gen flagship is available. Why, you ask? Because the G7 could bring a number of neat new features to the table that tickle your fancy – and, as we all know, there are few feelings worse than regret.

What is the LG V30?

The V30 is LG’s latest flagship device and it offers a whole load of features that wouldn’t find anywhere else. 

It’s a great phone, but one that appears to have lost some of its lustre as a result of the delayed release. Currently on the market are the Huawei Mate 10 Pro, Pixel 2 XL and iPhone X, all of which are muscling in on the V30’s territory.

LG V30 – Design

The V30 is the best designed LG phone I’ve ever used. It’s the perfect mix of high-end metal and glass, sporting curves in all the right places. It spells the end in LG’s transformation from making unattractive devices – the leather LG G4, anyone? – to ones that are gimmick-free.

Order LG V30 from Carphone Warehouse for £799

Like all the best flagships in 2017, the V30 slims down the bezel surrounding the display and pushes that screen out as far as possible. The corners of the screen are rounded, but the display doesn’t curve in the way of the Samsung Galaxy S8. This means the device is a tad wider, but still surprisingly manageable to grip considering the 6-inch screen.

Related: Best smartphones

Hand holding LG V30 smartphone by window with city view.

The LG V30 feels great in the hand, but unnervingly light. I’m sure that there will be many that like this, but I’m not so sure; I like my phones to have a little heft. Tap the rear of the V30 and it feels hollow, something you don’t get with an iPhone 8 or Note 8.

However, in terms of the LG V30’s design, this is really the only negative in my opinion. Elsewhere, it’s IP67-rated for water-resistance; it retains the headphone jack; and its fingerprint scanner sits in the right place – below the cameras on the back. That scanner also doubles as the lock button – and it’s one of the fastest I’ve tried.

LG V30 – Screen

This is the first LG flagship to swap an LCD panel for an OLED one since the days of those weird Flex phones. LG makes some of the best OLED panels for TVs, so you’d assume its smaller versions would be equally as good.

Annoyingly, they’re not. The screen isn’t terrible, but it’s comfortably the weakest part of the phone.

Detail isn’t the issue: the quad-HD resolution ensures pixels are impossible to spot. However, colours often come across slightly off. Whites are muddy, and it’s virtually impossible to watch HDR/Dolby Vision content on Netflix because it’s far too dark.

Viewing angles, too, are poor – tilt the device to the side and you’ll be met with a blue tinge.

Related: Best Android smartphones

LG V30 smartphone displaying home screen on a textured surface.

Use the LG V30 and you’ll quickly realise that we’ve been spoiled by the Super AMOLEDs in Samsung devices. LG’s OLEDs, called POLED (that P is for plastic), just aren’t as good. It’s the same panel type that let the Pixel 2 XL down. People often conclude that OLED is always better than an LCD, but viewing the V30’s display, I’d have been happier with the iPhone 8 Plus’ screen – which is LED.

Following the blueprint set by the Samsung Galaxy S8 and iPhone X, the V30 stretches the display out to the corners, reducing the distracting bezel. As a result, the V30 has an 18:9 aspect-ratio as opposed to the typical 16:9.

The panel is taller, which means it’s great for reading and multitasking, but less so for video. In YouTube, for example, there will be chunky black bars sitting either side of the video.

We test every mobile phone we review thoroughly. We use industry standard tests to compare features properly and we use the phone as our main device over the review period. We’ll always tell you what we find and we never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Used as our main phone for the review period

Reviewed using respected industry benchmarks and real world testing

Always has a SIM card installed

Tested with phone calls, games and popular apps

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