

The actual display and design of the phone is really great. The location of the fingerprint scanner was awkward and was difficult to unlock with one hand. The phone has a fingerprint scanner on the rear right underneath the camera, which to be honest, only worked about 50% of the time, and an additional SD card slot and huge removable battery. I enjoyed the sleek design, which looks high end. It’s quite a bit bigger than your iPhone 6, which you can see displayed side by side above. It weighs about 6oz, so it’s quite light and doesn’t bear a huge burden in your pocket. It has a huge display screen, at 5.7 inches, and is about 6 inches tall and 3 inches wide. The design of this phone is very sleek and quite large. This makes it easy to use the cord to plug into a computer or sound system. The phone charger comes with a two-pronged wall plug-in and a cord, where one end is a USB and the other end plugs into your phone. In the left most slot is the phone in all its glory, in the middle there is the phone charger, and in the right most area is the battery. It flips out into a three-compartment holder. The phone comes in a standard white box with the V20 logo on the front. So how does this phone do when faced with the schedule of a busy university student?

LG claims that this phone has superior true-to-life sound on video playback, a larger camera lens to capture more in photos and a new second screen feature on a phone running the newest Android 7.0 Nougat software. I’ve noticed more and more iPhone users switching back over to Android, which had me wondering, what changed? The perfect opportunity to jump back into Android phones arose with the new release of the LG V20. I’ve been an iPhone user for about two years now, and don’t get me wrong, I love my iPhone, but sometimes I miss the features that Android phones of my past provided.
