Alcatel 3V review – in pictures
A cheap phone that can't hide its budget roots
BUDGET PHONE KILLER?
The Alcatel 3V sounds like the perfect budget phone on paper. A bigger, sharper screen and fancier camera than the Moto G6 Play for the same price? Umm, yep, that sounds like a hot deal alright. Alas, this is one of those sad cases of reality not matching up with the promise, though. The Alcatel 3V feels way too slow, and the battery struggles to last a day. It should be a budget phone killer, but it turns out this gold bar is actually made of plastic. Still, at £149, you may still find it worthy of further consideration.
ULTRA-GLOSSY
The Alcatel 3V has the same design strategy as the Moto G6 Play. Its back is ultra-glossy and reacts to light at certain angles. Alcatel has tried to recreate the look of a glass and aluminium phone on a budget, like the Honor 9 Lite, but here everything is plastic. There’s glass on top of the screen, of course, but it’s not Gorilla Glass. For a cheap phone, the Alcatel 3V’s look is perfectly fine. The Alcatel name on the back may tell techy friends this probably isn’t a super-expensive iPhone X worrier, but it looks decent and is very light for such a large phone, just 155g.
BASIC BITS
You get a couple of reassuring features too. There’s a headphone jack, and a fingerprint scanner on the back. It’s not the fastest, but it works. The Alcatel 3V has its share of basic bits too. Its speaker is thin and not very loud, and while it looks like there are two speakers on the bottom, there’s just one. There’s no USB-C charging either, just plain old microSD. A rather measly 16GB is only half the amount of storage you get in the Moto G6 Play too, but you do at least get a microSD slot for expanding it.
BIG HIGHLIGHT
The great screen is what you get in return for the shortcomings elsewhere – it’s the Alcatel 3V’s highlight. It’s the trendy 18:9 shape that all the flagships are following, and is both larger and sharper than what the Moto G6 Play offers. Six inches and “2K” res for £150? That’s pretty special. You won’t find many phones this cheap with displays so well-primed for video streaming and gaming. Colour is vivid enough, and until you look at the Alcatel 3V with a critical eye, it doesn’t seem like you miss out much even compared to a phone three times the price. Want the bad bits? Fancier LCD screens look brighter at an angle and the Auto brightness is a bit rubbish. You’ll often need to fiddle with the backlight slider to get the screen at the right level. But getting this sort of sheer size and clarity for this price? It’s pretty impressive.
SLOW PERFORMER
The Alcatel 3V does’t make the most of this screen in other ways, though. High-end games chug along and the whole phone feels slow. There’s a wait for just about everything: app loads, for the keyboard to show up, for web pages to load, to look through your photos. The Alcatel 3V is frustrating, and you just don’t get this kind of annoying lag with the Moto G6 Play. This seems to be the curse of the Alcatel’s MediaTek processor. Some of Honor’s recent ultra-budget MediaTek CPU phones (not the Honor 9 Lite) have similar issues. The 3V has a MediaTek MT8735A processor, which only has four main cores and a dual-core GPU. That’s not much for a fairly high-res phone, and in Geekbench 4 the Alcatel 3V only scores 1812 points. The Honor 9 Lite earns twice as many points.
BATTERY WOES
There is another problem too. The Alcatel 3V has a 3000mAh battery, which sounds just about good enough for phone with a 6-inch 2K screen. However, getting it to last a full day of decent use can be a struggle. Watching the battery level creep down even when you barely use the phone is one of those stress-inducing trials. Who wants their Spotify playlist to conk out on the way home, leaving you with annoying phone conversations and screaming babies for company? This phone doesn’t support fast charging either, so you can’t just give it a quick top-up before you head out for the night. The Moto G6 Play’s battery life is far better. Not only is the Moto’s battery bigger at 4000mAh, but the Alcatel’s stamina is actually surprisingly poor for its capacity.
CAMERA QUALMS
There are a few other decent parts, though. The Alcatel 3V has a 12-megapixel rear camera that, in the right conditions, can take pretty good photos. Bright colours in flowers look vibrant but not over-done, some photos come out sharp and detailed, and the 3V even copes with night and low-light conditions better than some at the price. There are issues, though. First – you guessed it – the Alcatel 3V camera is slow. The app takes ages to load, and it’s just is not very responsive when you’re out shooting. The autofocus is a bit patchy too, and there’s no Auto HDR. There is a separate HDR mode but you have to switch it on automatically, and the results aren’t very good any way. All-in-all, the phone’s camera sensor seems good for the price, it’s just the software surrounding it that introduces problems.
ALCATEL 3V VERDICT
The Alcatel 3V could have been a 5-star phone. Loads of people would jump at the chance to get a screen this big and sharp for such a low price. But Alcatel hasn’t followed the Motorola Moto mantra of getting the basics right, though. The Alcatel 3V feels too slow, making it no fun to use. That’s enough to torpedo its chances of competing with the Moto G6 Play, even with a sharper screen. However, its battery life is also mediocre. Fancy parts like dual cameras and light-reactive design may be here, but the building blocks underneath need to be stronger to make this phone one to recommend.