Honor phones are an interesting bunch.
The brand basically exists so that Huawei can continue targeting the
affordable end of the market, without hindering its push to rebrand as a
premium phone maker.
That's why past Honor handsets such as the Honor 7 and Honor 5X have featured the strengths and weaknesses of Huawei phones – great hardware held back by the firm’s Emotion UI.
When I first picked up the Honor 5C at the phone’s London launch, I got a strong feeling history was repeating itself. But after a couple of hours with the device, I found myself warming to it, and left the event feeling the Honor 5C has the potential to be a worthy rival to the insanely good-value Moto G4.
That's why past Honor handsets such as the Honor 7 and Honor 5X have featured the strengths and weaknesses of Huawei phones – great hardware held back by the firm’s Emotion UI.
When I first picked up the Honor 5C at the phone’s London launch, I got a strong feeling history was repeating itself. But after a couple of hours with the device, I found myself warming to it, and left the event feeling the Honor 5C has the potential to be a worthy rival to the insanely good-value Moto G4.
The Honor 5C is undeniably excellent value
for money as a piece of hardware. It has internal specs that match, if
not beat, the Moto G4's. But its use of Huawei’s Emotion skin will be a
sticking point for many buyers. I can’t help but feel Honor should
follow Motorola’s example and load its handsets with an unskinned
version of Android.


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