LG Lucid 2 Review
07:15
It's hard to beat free, and the LG Lucid 2 is free 
on contract with Verizon Wireless. For your money (so to speak) you get a
 smartphone running Android 4.1.2 Jelly Bean on a 1.2GHz dual core 
Qualcomm Snapdragon S4 Plus CPU with a gig of RAM and 8 gigs of internal
 storage. The phone has a sharp 4.3" IPS qHD display, a microSD card 
slot and a removable battery. As you'd expect from a Verizon smartphone 
it has 4G LTE, dual band WiFi, Bluetooth and a GPS. There's a front 
video chat camera and a rear 5 megapixel camera with HDR. Not too shabby
 if you're looking for no cash outlay or you're starting out with your 
first smartphone.

Design and Ergonomics
In a sea of huge Android phones, the 
4.3" LG Lucid 2 is downright pocket-friendly and easy to hold. The 
tapered sides look good and feel good in hand and the back is grippy 
textured plastic. The back isn't exactly chic, but it is removable and 
it grants access to the battery, microSD card slot and micro SIM card 
slot. It's not a bad looking phone, though it won't beat the HTC One or even the Samsung Galaxy S4 in a beauty competition. The 4.5 ounce phone is 0.39 inches thick. 

As with most smartphones, the micro USB 
port for charging and syncing is at the bottom, the headset jack is up 
top and the speaker is on the back. The volume rocker is on the left 
side and the power button is at the upper right side. The 4.3" display 
dominates the front and there are 4 rather than the usual 3 Android 
capacitive buttons below the display. If you've used other Android 
phones, the extra button might throw you, and because button 
backlighting doesn't come on until you touch a button, it's hard to 
guess which one you should go for in the dark.
Display
The LG Lucid 2 has a 960 x 540 IPS 
display that's sharp and fairly bright. LG makes nice displays and we 
have no complaints even though the phone won't win any Retina 
competitions for extremely high resolution. At 4.3", it really does need
 a crazy high resolution to look good to the naked eye. Viewing angles 
on IPS displays are typically the best in the industry, verging on 180 
degrees. The seemingly thick glass creates glare and light refraction 
here that diminish viewing angles a bit, but it's not bad by any means. 
Outdoor visibility is decent, but not as good as the original LG Lucid with its wildly bright 600 nit display.

Calling and Data
First the bad part: voice quality is 
just passable. We noted somewhat digitized and warbling speech for 
incoming and outgoing voice. Conversation wasn't hindered, but we had to
 work a little harder to understand what was said at times. The good 
news is that data speeds on Verizon's LTE network were solid and the 
phone averaged 17Mbps down and 4Mbps up according to Ookla's 
Speedtest.net app. 
The Lucid 2 has the usual Mobile Hotspot
 feature so you can use the phone as a high speed wireless modem for 
your laptop or tablet. This is a CDMA smartphone with 3G EV-DO Rev. A 
and 4G LTE on Verizon's network. It is not a world phone with GSM 
roaming capabilities. 
Performance and Horsepower
Last year, a dual core Qualcomm 
Snapdragon S4 Plus was state of the art, but now the specs-obsessed 
world has moved on to quad core CPUs. Does that mean that the LG Lucid 
2's 1.2GHz dual core S4 Plus CPU with Adreno 225 graphics is slow? Quite
 the opposite: for average users this is a peppy phone that can handle 
web browsing, email, streaming video and gaming like a champ. Will it 
keep up with the top smartphones a year from now if you're playing the 
latest killer 3D game? Probably not, but this is an entry level free 
phone.  And a year from now it will still handle web browsing and most 
games perfectly well; it just won't be the fastest. In terms of 
synthetic benchmarks it does better than most Android smartphones 
running on the same CPU and it's comparable to the Verizon Wireless Samsung Galaxy S III running on the same CPU (in fact, it does better on some benchmarks).
Software
The phone runs Android OS 4.1.2 Jelly Bean, which isn't quite the newest 4.2 available on phones like the Nexus 4
 and upcoming Verizon Samsung Galaxy S4, but it's close enough that we 
won't complain. Currently, most phones other than those two are shipping
 with the same OS version. The Lucid 2 has LG's Optimus 3.0 UI 
enhancements, and these are toned down from previous versions (that's a 
good thing). The UI isn't overbearing and the quick access to settings 
and LG's handy memo app are good stuff. Still, the icons are a little 
cartoony and we get the feeling LG is copying Samsung's TouchWiz here 
and there. The phone supports gestures like flipping the phone to 
silence incoming calls or pause video playback and it has a notification
 LED above the display. There's a "Starter Mode" simplified UI option 
for newbies.
Camera
Budget phones don't often have good 
cameras, but LG makes solid camera phones and even the Lucid 2 manages 
images and 1080p video that are pleasing. For the price, we're pleased 
to see full HD video recording and HDR photo mode, and in fact the phone
 takes pleasing photos and video. No, it won't compete with the 13MP 
Samsung Galaxy S4, but I suspect entry level buyers will be very happy 
with the properly exposed photos and fairly smooth video captured by the
 LG Lucid 2. Just don't expect low noise, detailed nightclub shots or 
blur-free video of sporting events.
Battery Life
The 2460 mAh Lithium Ion offers more 
capacity than many competing smartphones, and given the dual core CPU 
and relatively small display that equals solid battery life. We had no 
trouble making it through the day on Verizon's LTE network in a mix of 
web browsing, calling, email, 30 minutes of YouTube video streaming and 
an hour of music playback with the screen off. The battery is removable 
so you can swap in a spare if needed. LG offers an optional desktop dock
 that can charge both the phone and a second battery.



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