READ THIS before you buy the iPhone Air

In this comprehensive iPhone Air review, we take a deep look at Apple's thinnest smartphone ever to see if the stunning design is worth the significant hardware sacrifices.

In this comprehensive iPhone Air review, we take a deep look at Apple's thinnest smartphone ever to see if the stunning design is worth the significant hardware sacrifices.

The Nothing Phone 3a review talks about the brand's move from plastic to glass and the attempt to bring a bloat-free Android experience, but conservative hardware choices leave a gap for power users.

The OPPO A6 Pro 5G is a no-nonsense budget smartphone that brings 5G to the masses without pretending to be something it isn't. Here's what you actually get for your money.

The Realme p4 power features a massive 10,001 mAh battery, setting a new record for mainstream smartphones while maintaining a thin 9.1 mm profile and offering a consistent user experience with the MediaTek Dimensity 7400 Ultra chip.

The Lava Agni 4 costs ₹24,999 and challenges everything you thought you knew about Indian smartphone brands. With an aluminum alloy frame, UFS 4.0 storage, stock Android 15, and a programmable Action Key, this phone doesn't try to beat Chinese giants on specs alone. Instead, it focuses on mechanical integrity, software purity, and thoughtful design. Here's whether India's homegrown challenger actually deserves your money.

The Realme Neo8 costs around ₹29,600 and packs an absurd 8000mAh battery, Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 processor, and 165Hz Samsung M14 AMOLED display in a phone that weighs 215 grams. With IP69 protection, a 50MP periscope telephoto, and PC Mode for gaming, Realme is targeting mobile gamers who refuse to compromise on battery life. But does cramming the world's largest battery into a smartphone actually make sense?

The Motorola Signature costs ₹1,05,000 and promises seven years of Android updates, a 165Hz LTPO AMOLED display with 6200 nits peak brightness, and Snapdragon 8 Gen 5 power. But with only a 5200mAh battery, a camera system that's good but not great, and build choices that feel odd at this price, Motorola's flagship ambitions collide with reality. Here's what your lakh rupees actually buy.

The Motorola Moto G Power (2026) costs ₹25,500 and includes something almost extinct in modern smartphones: a 3.5mm headphone jack, FM radio, and microSD card slot. With a 5200mAh battery, 6.8-inch LCD display, and MediaTek Dimensity 6300 processor, this phone targets people who value practical features over raw performance. But can nostalgia justify the compromises?

The Infinix Note Edge costs around ₹18,000 and promises a 6500mAh battery, 6.78-inch AMOLED display, and Android 16 with three major updates. But with a MediaTek Dimensity 7100 processor, UFS 2.2 storage, and only 8GB RAM, this phone reveals where budget manufacturers make their compromises. Here's the complete truth about what you're actually buying.

The Garmin Quatix 8 Pro costs ₹1,17,000 and includes satellite messaging, LTE calling up to 50 miles offshore, and marine-specific features that most people will never use. With a 1.4-inch AMOLED display, titanium construction, and 15-day battery life, this watch targets a very specific audience. Here's whether that audience includes you.