Skip to main content

Huawei Mate Xs review

Introduction

The Huawei Mate Xs is finally here! We have it in our hands, in the comfort of our office, without any show floor employees looking over our shoulder and carefully guiding us through what our experience should be.

The arrival of the Mate Xs is a noteworthy moment - yet another high-end foldable device will be making its way to the market and in the hands of consumers.

The original model never got released in Western markets. The Huawei Mate Xs is the second release - an updated version, which arrives in even tougher times with Huawei still under the US trade ban and COVID-19 spreading throughout the world like wildfire. Even Huawei itself admits this device has cost it a lot.

But that doesn't take away any of the importance of this milestone. Each new foldable device that arrives breaks the mould and explores new possibilities while offering different and novel user experiences. It doesn't get any more exciting than that for tech reviewers like us.

Huawei Mate Xs review

But let's go through the Mate Xs key specs first before getting to the actual reviewing.

Huawei Mate Xs specs

  • Body: Plastic front, aluminum back and frame; Unfolded: 161.3 x 146.2 x 5.4 mm; Folded: 161.3 x 78.5 x 11 mm; 300 g
  • Screen:Unfolded: 8.0-inch Foldable OLED FullView display, 2200 x 2480px; Folded: 6.6" OLED 1140 x 2480px
  • Rear camera: Primary: 40MP f/1.8, 1/1.7", PDAF; Telephoto: 8 MP, f/2.4, 52mm, OIS; Ultra-wide: 16 MP, f/2.2, 17mm; LED flash; 3D ToF; 2160p@30fps video recording, EIS; AIS (Huawei Ai image stabilization)
  • Front camera: Uses the main cameras.
  • Chipset: HiSilicon Kirin 990 5G (7nm+): Octa-core (2x2.86 GHz Cortex-A76 & 2x2.36 GHz Cortex-A76 & 4x1.95 GHz Cortex-A55), Mali-G76 MP16; NPU (Neural processing unit) Dual Big Core + 1 Tiny Core NPU
  • Memory: 8GB RAM, 512GB storage; NM (Nano Memory), up to 256GB (uses shared SIM slot)
  • OS: Android 10; EMUI 10.0.1
  • Battery: 4,500mAh (separated in two packs), 55W SuperCharge fast charging
  • Connectivity: 5G (SA/NSA), Hybrid Dual SIM (Nano-SIM, dual stand-by), Bluetooth 5.0, Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac/ax, dual GPS, USB 3.1 Type-C; NFC; IR blaster

To put things in context, it was actually the original Mate X that stole all the headlines, mainly due to its leading role in the last big foldable craze that took place during MWC 2019.

That led to an interesting story of rushed progress and all sorts of mishaps due to the overzealous desire of major manufacturers like Huawei and Samsung, as well as a few other smaller operators, to get on the foldable hype train as early as possible. This story is beyond the scope of this review, but let's just say that the foldable efforts by all makers have been through a rather rough patch.

Which gets us back to the excitement caused by the arrival of the Mate Xs for review. Yup, it's a milestone - at least for us - because its arrival means foldables are perhaps a step closer to becoming mainstream.

Design-wise, the Mate Xs is almost identical to its predecessor. However, it is, in a lot of ways, a second-generation device. It has been refined through and through and it's now a real product that Huawei plans on selling globally.

Most of these changes to the Mate Xs, however, are either internal or subtle enough to be rather hard to notice. Certainly not minor, but so intricate and particular that you shouldn't expect the updates to be apparent. It's not that most of us have had much hands-on time with the predecessor anyway so drawing parallels will not be of much use.

Huawei Mate Xs in official press material - Huawei Mate Xs review Huawei Mate Xs in official press material - Huawei Mate Xs review
Huawei Mate Xs info slides

It's a good thing then that the new Mate Xs should now be easier to find and experience to anyone interested.

It is still the very definition of a "halo product" only meant for the most affluent and adventurous early adopters. And, of course, ideally suited for attracting media coverage, such as this review, and gathering tons of organic brand exposure and public interest.

What we will be looking into in more detail, however, is how good the Mate Xs rates as an actual end-user product meant to be used day in, day out.

Unboxing the Huawei Mate Xs

When you are paying this much money for a phone, you'd be right to expect a certain level of experience across the board. Packaging and presentation are not things that any company, especially not one of Huawei's size, would skimp out on in a "halo product".

The Mate Xs comes in a big, lavish box made of thick cardboard, with a soft finish all around.

The internal space features the same soft, almost silky material and plenty of boxes to divide everything up, as well as a solid tray for the Mate Xs itself. It ships unfolded and well protected.

Huawei Mate Xs review

In terms of the accessory bundle, you get a pair of white, USB Type-C buds in one box. These are reminiscent of the signature Apple design that hangs off the ear lobe, instead of going inside the canal.

Also in the box - there is a case for your shiny new Mate Xs. We were quite curious as to what sort of case Huawei would come up for a device that has more screen than anything else and it's exactly what you can imagine - a thin piece of plastic that's meant to be used as a bumper case. It's attached with a set of adhesive stickers to the phone and it's designed to run around all edges, including the thicker metal bit.

There is not much you can do to protect a phone in this form factor from accidental drop damage. As far as we are aware, Huawei should also be offering some sort of a carrying case where you can tuck away the phone so it doesn't get scratched in your pocket.

Huawei Mate Xs review

Naturally, Huawei also includes a charger in the box. The cable it uses is a quite long Type-C to Type-C cable, rated at 3.3 amps. This is enough to cover the full 65W Power Delivery rating of the provided wall charger.

The Mate Xs charging capabilities, however, top off at 55W, so it was nice of Huawei to provide a 65W laptop-grade charger which is definitely above spec for this phone but one that might come in handy for your notebook just as well.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G review

  Introduction Click here for our  full and extensive review  of the Samsung Galaxy A52 5G, which the Samsung Galaxy A52s 5G is based on. We've said it before, and we'll say it again - Samsung currently has a really strong Galaxy A lineup. They took their "Awesome is for everyone" slogan to heart with interesting and fresh designs, as well as good value specs. Better still, the Korean giant definitely recognizes it has a good product on its hands and is now investing even further in extending its life. Particularly the Galaxy A52, which now has a new A52s 5G variant. Technically, it can be considered another generation of the product, compared to the vanilla A52 and the A52 5G, though there aren't too many new changes here. The first two A52 models came out back in March, with the 5G one swapping the original's Snapdragon 720G for a 5G-capable Snapdragon 750G and the 90Hz, 6.5 Super AMOLED display for a 120Hz one. All the while keeping the two devices physical

best offer amazon for mobile

 Best offer amazon for mobile 1.  OnePlus Nord CE 2 Lite 5G (Black Dusk, 6GB RAM, 128GB Storage) for Rs17999 check it out 2. Samsung Galaxy S20 FE 5G (Cloud Navy, 8GB RAM, 128GB Storage) with No Cost EMI & Additional Exchange Offers for Rs32000 check now  

Huawei MatePad Pro 12.6

  Huawei MatePad Pro 12.6 Introduction You are going to hear that it's a new dawn for Huawei thanks to the first public release of HarmonyOS. And the new MatePad tablets are supposed to usher Huawei's products into a Harmony era and drop Android for good. But underneath all this PR talk everything boils down to one thing - can Harmony-operated devices rival Android's and Apple's? We have the MediaPad Pro 12.6 for a review today, and that's what we are going to try and find out. Just because Apple is dominating the tablet market with its iPads, it doesn't mean the competition should disappear. On the contrary, we'd love to see more slates like the Galaxy Tab S7 trio and the newly announced MatePad series. The tablet market might appear as a niche one, but it leads to some incredible UI advancements and some of those inevitably make their way onto phones, too. And today we are thrilled to meet a new large tablet with stylus support and a (supposedly) brand new