Unboxing and Review of the budget-friendly Nokia 3.4 Device

The NOKIA 3.4 unboxing and review: Full spec, price & functionality

What’s in the box?

You have your user manuals, ear buds, a phone case and a USB-type C charger.

On the body on the device:

There’s a google assistant button with a dual-SIM slot right above that on one side and then the volume rocker and power button on the other side.

The grip is fantastic with a plastic back and perfect matte texture finishing that reduces its susceptibility to drops in this blue hue which gives a variant when hit by light rays.

Brightness and Display

You’ve got a metallic frame in between and then a glass display with a punch-hole camera which gives a lot of screen size; 6.39” actually, all framed by these not-so-delicate-looking bezels.

The brightness and visuals are pretty decent but may be lacking a bit in detail but not in any discomforting way to the viewer.

For the sound, you’ve got a mono speaker at the bottom which I’d rate as mid just because the sound coming through the speaker although not noisy isn’t as compact.

Storage Size and Battery Life

This particular Nokia 3.4 device has 64gb worth of storage expandable to up to 512GB and a RAM size of 4GB.

The device runs on Android 10 with a planned upgrade to Android 11 in the coming year.

The touch screen is responsive as far as multi-tasking and as performance go and I didn’t encounter any hassle with launching apps.

For battery, you’ve got 4000mAh battery-cell capacity which you can charge using its 10w Type-C charger.

Camera

On the Nokia 3.4 device, you’ve got a triple rear-camera lens:

13mp primary lens; 2mp depth sensor and 5mp ultra-wide angle.

While, images taken using the rear-camera in standard mode present a reasonable amount in detailing and capturing colours, that may be sacrificed when taking images in ultra-wide angle.

And to the front-facing camera, Sadly, the images taken using this camera failed to impress me even when taking under good lightning condition. Although images taken in portrait mode presented better details and saturation, images taken outdoor and indoor under good lightning seemed a bit too exposed and over-saturated.

I also made some video recordings at 1080p and shot @ 30fps which actually weren’t bad.

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