It's curved! 3500mAh battery lasts a really long time. A dualwindow feature lets you run two apps sidebyside on that massive screen — drag and drop photos into text messages
For example. Well spec'd
Snapdragon 800 processor
2GB RAM
32GB
Curved display
Excellent performance
Good build quality
Curved display provides a better watching experience
Powerful processor providing a great performance
Back cover can heal itself from minor scratches
Knock On feature is helpful
Good camera with 4K recording cap
Large
Bright display
Unique formfactor
Beautiful
Innovative industrial design
Outstanding battery life
Responsive software
Powerful hardware
Solid audio quality
Phenomenal battery life
Top-notch performance
Flexible screen adds to the phone's durability
The editors didn't like
Very poor display quality
Hard to operate in one hand
Mediocre camera
It's big enough to bring back memories of the Zack Morris brick phone. The curves would be slightly more forgivable if the phone itself were smaller and less cumbersome. Six inches is just way too big for a phone. Additionally
As with the LG G2
The volu
Splotchy distortion with the display
Underwhelming still image capture quality
Expensive outright cost
Bloated with many AT&T branded apps
Splotchy look with the display
No headphones included with the packaging
Running Android 4.2.2 Jelly Bean out of the box
With picture noise and shadow effects
No Full HD
Meager signal coverage
Storage not expandable
No scratch-proof panel glass
Self heal and flexing are gimmicks
Speaker gets slightly muffled easily
Screen disappoints
720p screen
Sunlight behaviour of screen
Blueish huse on pictures
No FM radio
Case creaks
Bloatware apps
Android 4.2 only
Big price
The impossible-to-reach rear buttons do not work on a device this big
The battery life is terrible considering the amount of juice available
All of LG's bundled software and skins are bad
The usual terrible plastic back—it deforms a little more than no
Without optical image stabilization
Its camera isn't as impressive as we've come to expect from flagship phones
While its unappealing POLED screen leaves us in a funk
Display imaging dull in spots
Images linger on display
No microSD
Handset slow to wake up from standby mode
The G Flex's massive size can be unwieldy
Its camera quality is mediocre
And its 720p display can't outpace its competitors
720p display resolution is relatively low for a 6"
Expensive smartphone
Poor speaker quality
Inconvenient rear key design
Lower resolution than other flagship phones
Pricey
Low screen resolution for price
Rear Key still problematic
Lackluster speaker
Poor audio
Unnatural Rear Key placement
Display not as sharp as other flagships
Not 1080p resolution
Lackluster speakers
Rear Key design not for everyone
Awkward rear-mounted buttons. Display is not full HD. Two iterations behind the latest Android version
Awkward rearmounted buttons. Display is not full HD. Two iterations behind the latest Android version
No microSD card slot
720p display rather than 1080p
Fixed battery
Not actually very curved or flexible
Six-inch screen lacks sharpness
Screen can be too big for some
It's obscenely huge. Please put it away before you frighten the children. The display isn't great
The screen is grainy with noticeable ghosting. Performance lags more than it should. The flash is terrible. Supposedly scratchresistant plastic back is not
Ugly
Overwrought Android skin
Bland design
Nothing takes advantage of the curves
Very expensive
Moderate screen resolution
No MicroSD slot for storage expansion
Curved shape could hinder portability
LG breaks new ground with the G Flex
A handset with a curved form factor and a backplate that can magically mend itself if it gets s
Boring interface with a lot of bloatware
No IOS for the camera
Display quality is unacceptable
Back panel can't recover from more intense damages and it is so easy to catch dirt
LG is trying to dominate the new niche of curved smartphone but it seems
Abstract: Just about everything at CES this year has been curved. Next in line for the bendy treatment - the smartphone. LG 's G Flex promises to bring an even more immersive and panoramic viewing experience to the mobile. In short, it doesn't, but what it does do ...
Published: 2013-12-20, Author: Chris , review by: pocket-lint.com
Abstract: The LG G Flex is the company's first curved-display device, capturing an emerging trend that's only really seen one rival, in Samsung's Galaxy Round. Launched in Korea in October, EE has confirmed that it will be selling the G Flex in the UK. We caught u...
A battery that goes on and on, Great performance, just like the G2, Curved screen gives great viewing angles
No Full HD screen, Camera lacks OIS
There's a lot about the G Flex that's brilliant, from the searing performance to the massive battery life and unusual, bottom-hugging styling. But that only makes the disappointments even more frustrating. This is a phone intended to make waves and grab...
Most powerful phone we've tested, Very comfortable for a 6-inch phablet, 2- to 3-day battery life, Gorgeous curved OLED screen, Great rear speaker
Too expensive, No built-in stylus, OLED screen has a grainy background, Too big for some hands, Scratch-healing doesn't work well
The G Flex is a fantastic phone, and the first phablet to ever feel natural in our hand. We do wish it had the stylus features of the Galaxy Note series, but LG has packed a lot into this device. It gets 2-3 day battery life, has a fun curved OLED scree...
Abstract: Size & Weight 160.5mm x 81.6mm x 7.9/8.7mm 177g G Flex is the only gadget in the world to come with a self-healing back panel, which automatically fixes any minor scratches or scruffs that the rear casing suffers The 6-inch display found in the G Flex is ...
Living on the cutting edge of technology doesn't come cheap, especially if that technology is still in its nascent stages. The G Flex will cost you Rs 70,000 a pop and that's a lot of money for a smartphone. As a ‘phablet', the G Flex is easily amongst th...
Good, Great for watching videos, Exceptional battery life, Blazing fast performance, Good ergonomics
Average camera, Very expensive
We like the LG G Flex but there is a caveat - its price. This curved beauty costs a whopping Rs. 68,500.Even for early adopters the price is prohibitively expensive. The argument is that you're is paying for exclusivity - but it still seems as though you'...
The G-Flex made a lot of news with the curved design, and LG has made it clear it isn't going to stop innovating by entering the race with the other giants. A bold move with the design, though a poor execution with the display, a great battery life and re...
Curved Display & Flexible body, Good Performace, Amazing battery life, Self healing back
Expensive
LG G Flex is available in India for Rs 68,000 which makes it one of the most expensive smartphones in the market. Company has given lots of innovative features in the device such as curved display, flexible body, self healing back etc which justifies the ...
Unique design, Good performance, Excellent battery life.
Looks odd, Average camera, Unreasonable pricing, Flexible body doesn't improve the handling, Selfhealing is questionable
The LG G Flex's closest rival Samsung's GALAXY Round comes with a horizontally curved screen. It lacks the self-healing tech and flexibility that's there on the G Flex. ore importantly, it's only available in Korea. However, just because there's no direc...