The Xperia L1 marks Sony's return to the still growing and highly-competitive entry-level market. Putting together a good smartphone for beginners can often turn out to be an even tougher task than designing a flagship. Maybe that's why Sony is retiring its E-series and introducing a new contender in the Xperia L1.
Sony previously covered the budget niche with the pocket-friendly E series, some water-proofed handsets in the M lineup, and the selfie-centric C-series; this added adequate depth and continuity all the way up to the flagship Z lineup.
Now the Xperia X is in charge, and Sony is obviously keen on revising its alphabet further down the ranks.
Other than the name change, the newly unveiled Xperia L1 isn't dramatically different from the typical Sony entry-level handset we're used to. Almost a year sharp after the Xperia E5, we get a premium looped surface design - well executed given the tight budget - as well as a big screen, LTE connectivity and a high-res camera. Reasonably priced and powered by an up-to-date Android version, this starter package has all the right bases covered.
Sony Xperia L1 key features:
Body: Polycarbonate Loop Surface design, scratch-resistant screen glass
Screen: 5.5" IPS LCD of 720 x 1,280px resolution (267ppi)
Camera: 13MP camera with AF, f/2.2 aperture; LED flash; 1080p @ 30 fps video capture;
Selfie cam: 5MP f/2.2; 1080p @ 30fps video capture
Chipset: MT6737T, quad-core 1.45GHz Cortex-A53 CPU, dual-core Mali-T720 GPU
Memory: 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage; microSD slot (hybrid)
OS: Android 7.0 Nougat with Xperia UI
Battery: 2,620mAh Li-Ion (sealed); Qnovo adaptive charging
Connectivity: Dual-SIM (optional); LTE-A (Cat.4 150/50Mbps); USB-C; Wi-Fi a/b/g/n; GPS/GLONASS; Bluetooth 4.2; NFC; FM radio
Main shortcomings:
Chipset delivers low-cost performance
No panorama mode in the camera app
it's a good phone, i really like sony's phones
indeed