Introduction

This is easily a phone you can pretend doesn't exist. And you don't have to try too hard either. The Meizu MX is something of a chimera. An iPhone body and a droid mind. It's not where you take things from - it's where you take them to. For a phone coming from China, the Meizu MX has no qualms with imitation. But it's not a characterless low-cost replica either.

Strictly speaking, the Meizu MX is an Android smartphone, but it goes to great lengths to emulate the Apple iPhone in its strengths and even some of its failings. The result is a unique Android experience that differs from iOS as well - it's a very curious device, the Meizu MX.



Meizu MX official photos

It's hard to deny that the Chinese company went all out loading up the MX for a fight. The phone packs a 4.0" ASV LCD screen of 640 x 960 pixel resolution (the same res as the iPhone 4/4S) and an Exynos chipset straight from the Samsung Galaxy Note (a tad faster than the one in the Galaxy S II).

Impressive stuff for sure, at least when you read the features off the specs sheet. Here are the rest of them, plus the disadvantages we found:

Key features

Quad-band GSM and penta-band 3G support

21.6 Mbps HSDPA and 5.76 Mbps HSUPA

4.0" 16M-color ASV capacitive touchscreen with 640 x 960 pixels resolution; Gorilla glass

Heavily skinned Android OS v2.3.5 ("Flyme OS")

1.4 GHz dual-core Cortex-A9 CPU, Mali-400MP GPU, Exynos chipset, 1GB of RAM

8 MP wide-angle autofocus camera with LED flash, face and smile detection; Wide Dynamic Mode

Up to 1080p video recording @ 30fps

Wi-Fi 802.11 b, g and n support; Wi-Fi hotspot

GPS with A-GPS connectivity; Digital compass

16GB of internal storage

Accelerometer, gyroscope and proximity sensor

Charging MHL microUSB port with USB host, TV-out support (1080p via an optional adapter) and S/PDIF-out for dock connection

Standard 3.5 mm audio jack

Stereo Bluetooth v2.1

Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic

VGA secondary video-call camera

Full Flash support

Document viewer

File manager comes preinstalled

Extremely rich audio and video format support

Beefy 1600 mAh battery

Main disadvantages

Looks too much like an iPhone knockoff

microSIM card support only

Sub-par viewing angles and sunlight legibility

Plastic finish of questionable quality

No dedicated camera key (volume rocker doesn’t quite cut it)

Non-expandable internal storage

Battery not user replaceable

No FM radio

It's not all perfect, but the Meizu MX can certainly go against a lot of Android flagships and show them a thing or two. But can it match the highly polished iOS experience and the trend-setting iPhone hardware?

Tough question. After using the MX for a while, you get the feeling that Meizu went trough the trouble of emulating even the downsides of the iPhone. But then you notice things that you wish iOS and vanilla Android had. The same goes for some areas of the hardware.



Meizu MX in our office

We're still not quite sure what to make of the Meizu MX, so this will be an interesting journey. Just try to approach it with an open mind, if you dismiss it as yet another replica, you'll miss out on an impressive (if derivative) device.

Update, December 30: We updated the Meizu MX with the retail firmware, which runs the CPU at 1.4GHz (it used to be 1.2GHz before) and re-ran the benchmarks. Check out the results on Page 3.