Testseek.com have collected 581 expert reviews of the HTC One X and the average rating is 85%. Scroll down and see all reviews for HTC One X.
April 2012
(85%)
581 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
(32%)
5 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
850100581
The editors liked
Incredible LCD2 screen
Sleek and simple form factor
Quad core nVidia Tegra 3
First Android 4 phone with custom skin
Elegant design and superb screen
Excellent performance
Some great camera features
This is a very good phone. HTC is learning more from what Samsung and Google are delivering than Apple. The One design team have delivered an excellent design and under the bonnet is a fast processor that delivers a lot of grunt. But is it the best phone yet? The answer is yes
It will give Samsung a run for their money which is good
As competition drives improvements.
Great screen
Stunning design
Powerful processor
Quality camera
The futuristically-styled $199.99 HTC One X offers Android fans on AT&T plenty to like
Such as a massive
Bright 4.7-inch screen
Blazing 4G LTE data speeds
A powerful camera
And zippy performance running Ice Cream Sandwich and Sense 4
Superb HD screen. Sleek unibody design. Unique camera features. Zippy everyday performance
Superthin body
Display brilliant
Camera
And runs Ice Cream Sandwich fast
The editors didn't like
HTC Sense Skin on top of Ice Cream Sandwich
Carrier Bloatware
Battery life
Poor battery life
Inconsistent Sense UI
There is not much to fault with this smartphone. HTC and their One design team have done an excellent job in delivering a highly practical device. The only thing that I would like to see is the the option to not load HTC Sync along with a new contacts phone number search window based on a simple window instead of having to find letters next to numbers.
Iffy battery life
No microSD slot
Video grainy
Sadly
HTC One X owners can't claim quad-core bragging rights. Also
The nonremovable battery and lack of SD card slot weaken an otherwise incredible Android smartphone
Non-replaceable battery and storage. Only average multimedia playback options. Battery life not suitable for business use
The AT&T version of the HTC One X has plenty going for it. The smartphone is just as beautiful and well put together as its global sibling, yet still manages to outperform it on almost every occasion. Comparisons aside, the Sense UI 4.0 offers top-notch u...
Great design, Nifty camera features, Wide viewing angles.
Expensive, Mediocre performance, Terrible battery life, Uncomfortable for onehanded use
As expected, One X's battery life isn't good. Its 1800 mAh Li-Po battery manages to keep the device up for only about 5 hours 30 minutes, and if you're playing games, it lasts only for around 3 hours and 20 minutes. The handset has a great design and i...
Abstract: There's no good story without a villain. No villains here though because this isn't just another story. It rather is Android history being made. And we don't fool ourselves - both these superphones will be history next year, in the less dignified sens...
The screen and the design are amazing. You will want to rub it on your face, The radio on this phone has superpowers. In NYC, it hit speeds up to 33.7Mbps download and 19.2Mbps upload. It's got an NFC chip (unlike the One S), which will be good if the mob
The U.S. version of the One X has the exact same dual-core 1.5GHz Snapdragon S4 processor as the One S (the Euro version of the One X has the quad-core Tegra 3). Despite that, the One X is actually not as fast as the One S, which has fewer pixels to drive
Totally. The one caveat is that you must like big phones. Theyre not for everybody, and thats a totally respectable position. If you do like big phones, though, this is easily the best Android phone on ATT, and very possibly the best Android phone peri...
Abstract: HTC One X is a high end Android phone that runs on the latest version of Android aka ice-cream Sandwich aka Android 4.0 and this is the first quad-core android phone which sport the Tegra 3 chip and also sports a 4.7″ screen with a 720p HD resolution, als...
The HTC One X is a fantastic phone, providing you can overlook its flaws. For some, the below-average call quality will most likely be a deal-breaker. For others, the One X's weak audio recording capabilities and inclusion of bloatware will be what dr...
Quadcore 1.5 GHz processor, Android OS, v4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich), 8 MP camera with AF, LED flash, BSI sensor and 1080p HD video recording, 264×2448 pixels, autofocus, 1.3MP front camera with a resolution of 720p for video chat, LED flash, Bluetooth v3.0
The phone does not have a SD card expansion slot, something which pulls it down one step when compared to its competitors, Like most other HTC phones, the battery life needs to be worked upon, No FM Radio, The typing experience is not as comfortable, The
With pretty neat visuals, audio quality and the build quality, the phone is sure attracting a lot of attention from the market, for a convincing spec sheet that is on the platter. The huge screen size means that you can have a good time browsing Youtube v...
Where do we start?, Out-of-the-world design Superb processor, Exciting camera, Sense 4.0, Ice Cream Sandwich OS, 25 GB Free DropBox storage
No MicroSD slot, No Beats headphones, MicroSIM, Disappointing battery life
The HTC One X is one of the best phones we have seen from HTC in a long time. It is endowed with almost everything one aspires to in a phone. A rocking camera, slick dimensions, great OS and UI and everything else. We aren't particularly complaining about...
Jaw dropping design, Excellent build quality, Above average Camera performance in daylight, HTC Sense 4.0 makes a lot of Sense, Insanely fast, First phone to ship with Android 4.0 ICS in India, First Quad core phone to be available in India
Mediocre Camera performance in low-light, Mediocre Battery Life of inbuilt battery, non-removable, No memory expansion, you are stuck with the inbuilt memory, No beats headphones in the box, just software tweaks, Pricey, Long Review, Hardware, HTC serve
Abstract: Finally, a phone that answers the user experience questions around AndroidHTC's market performance has slumped over the last few months – a result blamed squarely on the poor quality of the smartphones they've been churning out. Luckily, since then HTC se...