honer 9i review

Honor 9i Review


  Honor 9i Review

Huawei’s sub-brand Honor has been dishing out some good phones recently. The Honor 8 Pro (Review) which launched earlier this year went head-to-head with the OnePlus 5 (Review) stealing its thunder to some extent. We were impressed with the specs and features it offered for the price. With the market slowly pivoting towards 18:9 displays, Honor has made that move in the form of the Honor 9i. The screen isn’t the only interesting thing about this new phone. It also sports four cameras making it quite unique. While the specifications look good on paper, do they translate into a good real-world experience? We've got the answer.

Honor 9i design

If you have been tempted by phones with huge displays and thin bezels, the Honor 9i will pique your interest. It packs a huge 5.9-inch display with slim borders all around. Don’t let the screen size put you off, since the 18:9 aspect ratio means that the phone overall is roughly the same size as most current 5.5-inch phones. The big display means that the metal earpiece, sensors, and front cameras have been pushed right to the upper edge. The fingerprint scanner is at the back and you get a clean front face.
Pick the phone up, and the curved sides and edges feel comfortable in hand. The Honor 9i feels solid too, thanks to its metal unibody. While the black finish on our review unit looks gorgeous, it is a fingerprint magnet. The phone is also a little slippery if you aren’t careful when holding it. The dual camera module on the back protrudes by a couple of millimeters but has a metal rim surrounding it, which should help prevent scratches. Honor has lined up the LED flash, cameras, and fingerprint scanner down the center of the phone. We found that we needed to stretch our fingers a little to reach the fingerprint scanner and that a slightly lower positioning would have been better.
In terms of hardware, the Honor 9i is powered by a Huawei Kirin 659 SoC, which has eight ARM Cortex-A53 cores - four cores are clocked at 1.7GHz and the other four cores at 2.36GHz. There is 4GB of RAM and 64GB of internal storage which is expandable thanks to the hybrid dual-SIM slot. This is a dual-SIM device with two Nano-SIM slots, but you can swap the second SIM for a microSD card of up to 128GB. Honor has also packed in a 3340mAh battery which is a little bigger than average.
Honor has used its tried and tested custom interface called EMUI on the Honor 9i. You get EMUI 5.1 on top of Android Nougat. Huawei uses its own visual style and has rearranged a few options in the Settings app, but it won’t take much time to get used to. There are gestures that simplify taking screenshots and launching apps. Honor calls these knuckle gestures, and they work by knocking on the screen. You can double-knock to take a screenshot or do a two-knuckle tap to start screen recording. You also have the option to launch apps and enter split-screen mode by tracing letters on the screen. We found some of these quite useful during our review period.
The FullView display isn’t very convenient for one-handed use, and the top corners are hard to reach. Honor has also integrated a single-hand mode that shrinks the display down to one corner of the screen. You need to swipe across the navigation buttons to enable it. One other issue with the 18:9 display is that all apps aren’t ready for it yet. While you can run these apps with a black bar at the bottom, Honor also gives you the option to scale them to fit the screen. You get a simple prompt to enable this or you can do it in the display settings.
There's also quite a bit of bloatware. The Honor 9i has a few custom apps including HiCare - a service support app; HiGame - a gaming app store; plus Hi Honor and Honor Community which are Web shortcuts. EMUI has support for themes which gives you the ability to change the look of the device.

Honor 9i performance, battery life, and cameras

The performance of the Honor 9i is in the same range as that of other devices at this price point. The phone managed to clock 60,550 in AnTuTu, and 914 and 3460 in Geekbench 4's single-core and multi-core test respectively. The phone does not heat up when running day-to-day tasks but it does get warm after gaming for a while. You will enjoy playing games and watching movies on the big screen. We played Real Racing 3, Prime Peaks, and Clash Royale to test how the Honor 9i fares. While Real Racing 3 and Prime Peaks functioned normally, Clash Royale ran zoomed in, resulting in the sides getting cropped. We couldn’t find a way to run the game letterboxed to 16:9 and had to get used to it.
We also observed a higher rate of battery drain when gaming so you might want to keep an eye on the charge level. When you aren’t running processor-intensive tasks the phone manages power quite well. With light to medium use the Honor 9i lasted us one working day, but playing games and watching videos has a significant impact on battery life. In our HD video loop test, the phone lasted for 8 hours and 54 minutes which isn’t great compared to other smartphones. You can use the power saver mode which aggressively shuts down background processes and cuts off background syncing, but there is no support for fast charging, which is disappointing.



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