Honor 7x gaming review
Read here about gaming review of honor 7X
When you finally are using every inch of the screen, content does look more immersive. What little bezel there is simply melts away when you're watching video, and in those moments, the Honor 7X really feels three to four times more expensive than it is.
Taking a closer look at color, the Honor 7X reproduced 105.5 percent of the sRGB space and notched a Delta-E score of 0.38, indicating realistic and accurate hues. (Delta-E numbers closer to zero are better.) The Honor 7X doesn't feature multiple display modes offering different color profiles, nor does it tout the kind of oversaturation that has become common with many of the latest smartphone displays — so what you see is pretty much what you get.
Fortunately, it's a bright display, too. At 510 nits of peak full-screen brightness, the Honor 7X handily trumps the 433-nit smartphone average. It's not quite as vibrant as the 591-nit panel in the Moto G5 Plus, but outdoors, it's practically just as visible, and Motorola can't match the sheer size of the 7X's screen.
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