Latest update: We've received an invite to an LG
event that's likely to be the G4 announcement. Plus new snaps of the
phone may have been uncovered and it might be packing a
not-so-cutting-edge Snapdragon 808 chip.
The LG G4 missed MWC 2015 but it looks like we may see it as soon as April, so the wait is hopefully almost over.
It
should be worth the wait too, with talk of a premium new design, a
super-sharp display and a whole lot of power. Plus this is the company
which brought us the LG G Flex 2, so a curved screen is never entirely off the table.
With the Samsung Galaxy S6 and HTC One M9 out the way LG G4 rumors are heating up and flooding in and we're hopeful that it can stand up to such tough competition.
Cut to the chase
What is it? LG's next flagship smartphone
When is it out? Likely to be announced on April 28
What will it cost? It will command a high, flagship price - but cheaper than the competition
LG G4 release date
We've received an invite
for an LG announcement on April 28 and not only does the invite itself
hint at the G4 but the announcement event is taking place in London, New
York, Paris, Seoul, Singapore and Istanbul- so it's bound to be for
something big. Of
course it could be a few weeks or more after that before the LG G4
actually lands in shops, so don't expect to be able to buy it before
May.
An April or May launch has been looking likely for a while now, with an earlier rumor pointing to April and another rumor pointing to a May launch at the earliest, while an earnings call pointed to a quarter 2 release.
LG G4 design
We may have caught a glimpse
of the LG G4 in the wild, as a metal-backed LG phone certainly seems to
have been snapped. Though it's on the large side and appears to have a
stylus, which suggests it could actually be the LG G4 Note. It's still unclear whether the G4 will have a metal body or not. Some rumors say yes while others say no. The LG G4 could be almost with us though, as case makers are already selling protective covers.
If they're an accurate fit then you can expect a return of the laser
autofocus and dual-LED flash found on the LG G3 judging by the cut-outs. Credit: @OnLeaks / 1688.comWe've also seen several press renders,
supposedly showing a non-final version of the handset, with a curved
back, a large camera lens and dimensions of 148.9 x 76.5 x 9.9mm, which
oddly would make it bigger than the LG G3. It also seems to have the
same metal-effect casing. That last bit clashes with a previous rumor though, as LG's mobile chief Juno Cho has stated
that the G4 will be "radically different" to anything that's come
before, with those changes including a metal casing rather than a
polycarbonate one.
LG G4 screen
The LG G4 might have an even bigger display than the LG G3, as @OnLeaks claims it will come in at 5.6 inches. It also looks like the LG G4 will have an ever so slightly curved screen, as @OnLeaks attempted to prove with the drawing of a very straight line over a leaked press image. Additionally it seems the LG G4 may have a QHD 1440 x 2560 display, as both a user agent profile page and an html5test result suggest as much. Though one wilder rumor based on a leaked specifications screenshot tied to the G4 suggests that it will have a 3K 1620 x 2880 display.
It could also be goodbye bezel
on the LG G4, as the South Korean firm has launched a display with a
super slender 0.7mm of fat around its perimeter. The screen in question
measures 5.3 inches, which is a jot smaller than the 5.5-inch G3, though
given other rumors point to a 5.6-inch screen we wouldn't count on it.
The LG G3 has 1.15mm of bezel either side of the screen, so this new display if used could make the G4 look visually stunning. LG is apparently also preparing a fleet of bendable phones for 2015, following in the footsteps of the LG G Flex and the LG G Flex 2,
and links are being made between this and the rumored G4. In fact LG
quietly took the covers off a three sided smartphone at CES 2015 in Las
Vegas - could this be our first glimpse at the LG G4?
LG G4 rivals
As a flagship Android phone the LG G4 will have the Samsung Galaxy S6 as a major rival and if it ends up being curved then it could also have some direct competition from the Samsung Galaxy S6 Edge.
Of course the HTC One M9 will give it a run for its money too with its stylish build and similar specs to those the G4 is rumored to pack. The Sony Xperia Z4, which may well arrive at a similar time to the LG G4, could give it pause for thought as well.
Then there's always the iPhone 6 and the looming threat of the iPhone 6s for anyone not married to Android. In short the LG G4 is going to have some serious competition.
LG G4 camera and battery
Best intelligence, from a batch of leaks, suggests the LG G4's camera will be boosted from the 13MP resolution of the LG G3 to 16MP.
Though G4Games
reports that LG has unveiled a new 20.7MP sensor, which could be headed
for the LG G4. The key question then is how the brand will use this new
technology after the snapper on the G3, which should have been awesome,
was woeful compared to the competition.
Another rumor, this time stemming from inews24, is that the LG G4 will have dual rear cameras a bit like the HTC One M8, though we'd take that claim with a huge pinch of salt.
LG G4 OS and power
Surprisingly the LG G4 might pass on the Snapdragon 810 and use the weaker Snapdragon 808 instead, if a benchmark
believed to be from the LG G4 is to be believed. It could be true
though as the Snapdragon 810 reportedly suffers from overheating issues.
Alongside that it's shown with a meaty 3GB of RAM.
Though that flies in the face of earlier rumors, which suggested that the LG G4 would sport a Snapdragon 810 processor and 3GB of RAM. That had seemed likely, given that the HTC One M9 has arrived with exactly those specs and even the LG G Flex 2 uses the Snapdragon 810.
LG's mobile chief Juno Cho has stated that the G4 will use the LG UX 4.0, which is a new UX system, set to be announced before the handset.
The LG G4 is also bound to run Android 5.0 Lollipop straight out of the box, which is good news if you want a handset that comes with Google's latest mobile operating system.
LG G4 other features
One particularly spurious LG G4 rumor
suggests we may see a fingerprint scanner on the back of the handset.
This would seemingly be a last minute decision and LG officials have
denied the rumor, but with Samsung and Apple both including them in
their flagships there's a possibility that LG could follow suit.
There is also a suggestion that the LG G4 may pack a stylus
in its body, but we'd be surprised if LG put this on its core flagship
device. It's probably something that will arrive with a variant, like
the LG G3 Stylus.
While we're fleshing out the details of what will be coming with the LG G4, here's what we want to see when we do:
A metal chassis
The
LG G3 sure does a good job of looking metallic, but that's all it is,
an effect, and as soon as you pick up the phone the illusion is broken,
so much so in fact that it actually winds up feeling cheaper than the LG
G2.
So
we really hope the LG G4 will go the whole hog and have a shell crafted
from actual metal. Even Samsung's sticking metal in its phones now so
LG really can't afford not to.
We'd also appreciate it if they
gave the G4 a unibody rather than having a removable back, as it's
likely to feel more solid and premium as a result.
Improved battery life
The
LG G3 had good battery life, but it was actually slightly worse than
the G2's battery and that's not a trend we like to see. There's steeper
competition here now too, with Sony in particular doing well with the Xperia Z3 and the Xperia Z3 Compact, both of which have a whole lot of juice.
A battery saving mode
Battery
saving modes are all the rage these days, whether it's Sony's Stamina
mode, HTC's Extreme power saving mode or Samsung's Ultra power saving
mode, but the LG G3 doesn't have one.
Now it already does a good
job of conserving battery on the fly, by adapting the display and
slowing down the processor when the extra horsepower isn't needed, but
it would be great if the LG G4 went even further and had additional
options that could be toggled as needed, just to squeeze even more juice
out.
More power
More power is an obvious wish and an
increasingly redundant one as most high end phones are levelling out and
delivering near faultless performance. But the LG G3 actually did
noticeably lag at times.
Maybe that's down to the QHD display,
maybe it's just down to poor optimisation, but whatever the reason we
really hope LG sorts it out and gives us a faster phone in the LG G4.
A slicker interface
LG
could also afford to do some more work on its interface. The G2's was a
cluttered nightmare and the G3's was a big step in the right direction,
but still not as slick as it could be. In
particular we'd like to see improvements made to Smart Notice. This
sits below the weather widget on the home screen and gives you tailored
advice and suggestions, for example it might give you more details on
the weather or suggest you add someone to your contacts if you call them
a lot.
The problem is it just doesn't work that well, often
providing irrelevant advice, so LG should make it smarter or ditch it,
we already have Google Now after all.
A better camera
On
the whole the LG G3 has a pretty great camera, complete with optical
image stabilisation and a laser autofocus. But while it performs well in
bright light it's not so good in low light, relying on software to
unconvincingly smooth over noisy shots, rather than taking good photos
to begin with. So hopefully the LG G4 will improve in that area. Recent rumours have suggested that we'll be getting what we wished for, with the LG G4 coming with a 16 megapixel snapper. We'd
also like to be given more manual control. The LG G3 is great if you
just want to point and shoot, but there aren't many options for those
who want to adjust the exposure or ISO for example.
A superior screen
This
one might seem strange, after all the LG G3 is already QHD, but we're
not talking about more pixels. Rather we'd like to see improved
performance from the pixels that are already there. In particular the LG
G3 suffers from a noticeable loss in brightness when not viewed square
on, so if LG can sort that for the G4 we'd be pretty happy.
Water and dust resistance
While
not exactly a headline feature, water and dust resistance are
undeniably nice things to have. We have to wonder how many people ever
actively make use of the fact that they can submerge their smartphone,
but knowing that it can survive a little water gives us some peace of
mind.
Here in England it rains all the time and sometimes we'd
actually like to be able to use our phone while outside, without first
crafting a makeshift shield from whatever else we happen to be carrying /
wearing at the time.
Knock Code Improvements
We love
Knock On – the ability to wake up your phone with a tap, but Knock Code,
which takes things further by letting you also unlock your phone with a
series of taps, just doesn't work all that well.
The main problem
is that if you touch the screen when picking the G3 up it registers
that touch as the first tap and causes the pattern to be interpreted
incorrectly. We're not quite sure how LG can get around that so it's a
good thing we're not designing the G4, but hopefully LG has a solution
because a feature which doesn't work is just an annoyance.
Front-facing speakers
With
support for high quality audio the LG G3 already does a great job when
listening to music through a good pair of headphones, but its speaker
isn't so hot either in terms of positioning or quality.
For the LG G4 we'd like to see dual front-facing speakers, like those on the HTC One M8
and Sony Xperia Z3. It's a much more logical place for them, especially
when you're watching something or playing a game. If LG can make the
sound crisper and richer too then all the better.