WHAT IS THE ASUS ZENFONE 6?
Sporting a 6-inch screen, the Asus Zenfone 6 is the largest model in Asus’s new range of Zenfones – a set of handsets out to bring Asus phones to a mainstream audience. This rather marked step up in price from the Zenfone 5 will get you a bigger screen, and both a better processor and camera.
Although the diminutive Zenfone 4 was a big disappointment we are big fans of the Zenfone 5, and it’s great value from just £119 SIM-free. The Zenfone 6 is a trickier proposition as its increased size introduces some usability issues, and at £250 without 4G it’s a pretty hefty investment. But it’s ultimately a solid phone, and a good deal if you don’t mind having a brand on your phone that your friends might turn their noses up at.
Packing a 6-inch screen, the Asus Zenfone 6 was always going to be a handful – You can’t build a phone with a 6-inch screen and make it small.
As the score suggests, we quite like the Zenfone 6. Unless you have gigantic hands though the size is something you need to take in to account before buying. In order to hold the handset in one hand you need to grasp it at the very edges of your fingertips, leaving little space to manoeuvre it unless you bring your second hand into the equation.
To limit the difficulties that arise from having such a large screen Asus could have trimmed the screen bezels down further, much like in the LG G3. Given its relatively recent beginnings in the mobile industry it’s difficult to be too harsh with Asus here, but sure enough the Zenfone 6 is sporting a width almost 6mm greater than the Galaxy Note 4. Yes, that phone has a slightly smaller 5.7-inch screen, but it’s one of the few genuinely desirable big-screen alternatives available.
Aside from the largely inescapable size issues (The Zenfone 6 also tops the scales at a rather hefty 196g) the Asus Zenfone 6 design is mostly a complete success. The look isn’t showy but has just enough little Asus inflections here to give the phone something bordering on an identity.
You get a shiny bit of metal below the screen bearing a neat-looking finish of concentric circles - an Asus signature - a small Asus logo on back and front, and a simple, curved plastic rear.
In the Zenfone 5 we complained that the hardware soft keys looked a bit toy-like, a bit too large. However – strangely enough – they’re actually a bit smaller in this larger phone, giving them a more refined and sophisticated look.
The Zenfone 6’s design is not dynamic or particularly different. But from a company whose previous ‘phones’ like the Padfone 2 have been as ‘out there’ as the professor from Back to the Future, that’s no bad thing.
we should also note that Asus has put some clear thought into making the Zenfone 6 as usable as it can be. Where in the Zenfone 5 the power button sits above the volume rocker, here it’s below, keeping it within reach of your thumb. It’s hardly a eureka moment, but it’s reassuring.
Build quality of the Zenfone 6 is commendable, even though the whole rear of the phone is a fairly standard moulded piece of plastic. It feels tough, there are no wide seams or creaky bits and the front of the phone is covered with Gorilla Glass 3.
This is the kind of toughened glass used in a great many high-end phones, and means you don’t really need a screen protector unless you really want to sell it on in perfect condition in a year or so. It’s highly scratch-resistant, and while it’s used in quite a lot of lower-cost phones these days – even the Motorola Moto E – it’s good to see Asus managed to fit such a large pane of the stuff into the budget.