Honor 400 review

 


 


Introduction

The Honor 400 duo is globally available, and we've already checked out the Pro model. Now it's time for the vanilla Honor 400. Although the two phones share a lot of design elements, they are definitely not identical either in or out.

The Honor 400 is a much more angular device with more flat surfaces. The middle frame has nicely curved edges, but that's about it. Unlike the Pro model, with its curvy display, the Honor 400 is flat on both the front and the back. It is a pretty thin and light device, which is always appreciated. Its display is a definite standout feature. It gets very bright and is also HDR-certified.


Although the vanilla model is missing a telephoto camera, compared to its Pro sibling, its camera setup still looks quite promising on paper. Its 200MP main camera should have enough resolution for some good digital zooms. On top of that, there is an autofocusing ultrawide, which should be able to pull double duty for macros. And a 50MP selfie rounds off the list quite well.

The Honor 400 isn't exactly a performance powerhouse with its Snapdragon 7 Gen 3 chipset. However, in a rather interesting move, Honor decided to invest a lot in AI for the Honor 400 family, which also includes the regular Honor 400. You get some interesting features like image outpainting and static image to video generation seemingly for free. These are powered by Google's potent AI models and seem to run exclusively in the cloud.

Rounding things off, the Honor 400 also offers a potent set of modern connectivity features. We'll make sure to go over these in the appropriate review sections.


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