Monday, July 27, 2015

Micromax Canvas Spark Review

Since a year or so Micromax has faced heavy competition from Chinese phone manufacturers but recently the Indian company has tried to turn things around and has been able to do so with the YU brand. While the YU brand and many other players tussle it out near the 7K price mark, Micromax has launched the Micromax Canvas Spark. The Spark tries to please the loyal customer base for whom the budget is much more important than performance. 
There have been cheaper phones in the past and to be very blunt, in our experience, smartphones under the 5K mark are not well equipped to handle resource intensive tasks. Thus, it is quite conventional to presume that at a price of Rs. 4,999, Micromax may have compromised on performance and quality. Thus, we tried to find how much of a smartphone you can get at this price.
Design & build: A smaller YU Yureka
The Micromax Canvas Spark touches all the right notes from a design perspective. The curved back, tactile and easy to reach button layout and a side trim with a metal finish which makes the phone look upmarket. I even liked the soft touch matte-ish plastic back. All these elements remind me of the Yu Yureka. However, I don’t like the unlit navigation keys which required some getting used to.
The phone has a plastic build and even though it may not be as robust as Microsoft’s Asha range of phones, it is satisfactory for the price. The use of Gorilla Glass 3 adds some confidence but the glass which covers the camera lens on the back will scratch eventually since it sitts flush against the surface and not in a protective depression. Overall, the Micromax Canvas Spark ticks almost all check marks I expect from a budget offering in the design and build segment.
Display & UI: Satisfactory for the price
The Micromax Canvas Spark is a budget smartphone and therefore I was expecting an average display and I was quite right. Sunlight legibility is poor and touch performance is not upto the mark. Saying that, the 4.7-inch 960 x 540p display is still good enough for the price. It offers decent colour reproduction and minimal colour shift but I believe Micromax could have done better.
On the UI part Micromax has stuck with the basics. The device runs Android Lollipop out of the box making it the first budget phone to do so. Micromax hasn't fiddled much with the stock Android UI and the phone’s UI looks blissfully spartan. However, the long press to multitask gesture is not well implemented and I often found myself on the ‘screen settings menu’ instead of the multitask drawer.
Performance: the average student
The budget phone is rather underpowered when compared to the 7K contenders. While it is powerful enough to tackle daily tasks, it often exhibits lag when you try to open multiple webpages. Same goes with performance intensive tasks like games which work for the most part with an occasional lag during gameplay. Needless to say graphic capabilities are not that ground-breaking either. As you can see below, the Micromax Canvas Spark settles considerably below the 7K budget segment smartphones in synthetic benchmarks.

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