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| Vivo V23e specs in brief |
|---|
| OS: Android 11 Release Date: November 2021 Network Type: 2G/3G/4G/5G Display: 6.44-inch, 1080 x 2400 pixels resolution Processor: MediaTek Dimensity 810 Selfie Camera: 44 MP Rear camera: 50 MP triple RAM: 8 GB ROM: 128 GB Battery: 4050 mAh Related: Vivo V23e . |

Vivo V23e 5G specs & features
Mobile Wireless Network and Software
- 2G mobile network bands : GSM, GPRS, EDGE 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 MHz.
- 3G mobile network bands : UMTS, WCDMA, HSDPA 850 / 900 / 2100 MHz
- 4G mobile network bands : LTE.
- 5G mobile network bands : Yes.
- SIM Type : Nano-SIM, Dual SIM
- Software / OS : Android 11 + Funtouch OS 12
Design, Form Factor, Appearance
- Dimensions : 160.9 x 74.3 x 7.4 mm
- Weight : 172g
- Display : 6.44 inches, 1080 x 2400 pixels, 20:9 aspect ratio, AMOLED screen
- Colours : Black. Sunshine Coast.
- Physical Build : Plastic
Internal Hardware Specs
- Processor Type : 64-bit, 2.05 GHz Octa-core, Cortex
- Processor Name : MediaTek Dimensity 810 (12 nm)
- Graphics Processor : ARM Mali G57 MC2
- RAM : 8 GB
- Internal Storage : 128 GB
- External Storage : microSD (shared slot)
Photography, Video Recording
- Main Camera : 50 MP main lens + 8 MP ultra-wide angle lens + 2 MP macro lens, autofocus, Dual-LED dual-tone flash, 4k@30fps, 1080p@30fps video recording
- Front Camera : 44 MP, auto-focus, Face Recognition, 4k@30fps, 1080p@30fps video capture
Audio, Video Playback
- Music Support : PCM, AAC / AAC + / eAAC + / MP3 / AMR – NB / WB / APE
- Audio : 3.5 mm audio jack
- Loudspeaker : Mono speaker
- Video Support : H.264/MP4/MPEG4 player
- FM Radio : Yes.
Phone Sensors
- Digital Compass : Yes.
- Accelerometer : Yes.
- Proximity Sensor : Yes.
- Ambient Light Sensor : Yes.
- Barometer : No.
- Pedometer : No.
- Heart Rate Monitor : No.
- Gyroscope (G-Sensor) : Yes.
- Fingerprint Scanner : Yes; under display.
- Face Unlock : Yes.
- Iris Scanner : No.
- Motion Sensing / Gesture Control : No.
- Voice Control : No.
- Intelligent Digital Assistant : Yes; Google Assistant.
- Infra-red Sensor : No.
Connectivity Options
- Bluetooth Version : 5.2
- Bluetooth Profiles : A2DP, LE, aptX HD
- WiFi : Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, hotspot
- GPS : Yes, A-GPS, GLONASS, GALILEO, BDS
- USB : microUSB v2.0. Type-C. USB-OTG
- NFC : No.
Miscellaneous Specs and Features
- Battery Type and Capacity : Non-Removable Lithium-Polymer 4050 mAh
- Battery Charging : 44W quick charge
- Wireless Charging : No.
- Reverse Charging : No.
- Model Version/Number :
Launch/Release Dates and Information
- Announced : November 22, 2021
- Release Date : November 22, 2021
Vivo V23e Prices by Country
The phone was first launched in Thailand with a price tag of THB12,999.
- International/Global : $392
- Thailand : THB12,999
- European Union :
- Nigeria : ₦
- Egypt : Egyptian Pound
- UAE : AED
- India : INR 25,990 Indian Rupee
- Iraq : Iraqi Dinar
- Kenya : Ksh.
- Ghana :
The above prices may change with time from country to country, as market forces and economic policies influence product price movements.
Does Vivo V23e 5G have Google Play Store?
It supports Google Services and software applications, including Play Store and Maps, Gmail, YouTube, and others.
Will Vivo V23e 5G work in the USA?
This is a GSM phone and is supported on US GSM carriers like AT&T and T-Mobile and other networks riding on their networks. It does not support CDMA networks. Do make enquiries from your carrier to know what bands/frequencies are supported on their service.
MobilityArena Buyer’s Guide Verdict
Selfie cameras have always been the weak link in the chain of camera phones. There are not a lot of smartphones with a 44-megapixel front camera. Vivo V23e 5G is one of them, and this makes it a very compelling device.
Our Buyer’s Guide Verdict is a recommendation based on the specs of the device and a general guide to help you understand how much value a device offers for its price. It is not an endorsement of the device. Ask questions and use your judgement when buying any device; MobilityArena takes no responsibility for your buying decisions .
Vivo V23e 5G Phone Review Rating
Not available.
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Author:InfoDesk
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Dayo and I are forever discussing smartphones. One of our pet peeves has been how Google cripples it’s Pixel smartphones in annoying ways. As a matter of fact, it was as if Google had made a pact with the gods of mobile that it would never make cutting edge features available on its models. How do I mean?
Take any one of the Pixel models from the very first all the way up to the last model before Pixel 6 Pro, and none of them has cutting edge fast charging. You just have to make do with 18W fast charging, at the best. 18W quick charge is like the odd cousin of fast charging: it is neither slow nor really fast.
If you have never used 33W quick charge, you probably would not get the picture. But consider that there are phones with 67W quick charging out there already, and you just might get a picture of how painfully slow 18W is.
I understand that this limitation on fast charging is done to preserve the battery. Ho-hum. Anyway, in this year of our Lord, 2021, Google finally bumped it up to 30W. Only that it wasn’t quite 30W. In reality, the Pixel 6 Pro charges at 23W speed. Not quite the same as 30W, but thank the gods, users do not have to suffer with 18W any more.
Related to charging speed is battery capacity. Google phones were not known for outstanding battery life. As a matter of fact, Dayo and I suspect that Apple and Google made a pact with the devil to starve users of their phones of long battery life. “Keep them chained to their chargers,” the devil whispered to them, “and I will make you rich.”
Whatever the deal was, Pixel phones, while not as poorly as iPhones, generally had battery life that registered at the lower end of the spectrum. This was until the Pixel 5a 5G showed up this year. That was the last model before the launch of the Pixel 6 and Pixel 6 Pro.
With a 4680 mAh battery, the 5a 5G arrived with exemplary battery life right up there with some of the best. Never before in the history of Pixel phones had there been a model with that much juice or longevity.
Google Pixel 6 Pro
The Pixel 6 duo have good battery capacities too – 4614 mAh and 5003 mAh respectively for the non-Pro and the Pro models. The battery life results in real use are not as fantastic as I was expecting, buy they are good numbers, even if not at the top. The summary is that we now have a new generation of Pixel smartphones with solid battery life.
What of performance? Despite charging a premium for their devices, Google decided to use a mid-range chipset in the Pixel 5. Sigh. You just couldn’t have the best of everything with Google. They always crippled the phone woke way or the other.
The Snapdragon 765 chipset is the very same one used in the Pixel 4a and 4a 5G. I am so rolling my eyes. Not to mention how they used the same camera modules in multiple models in the last few years.
With Google, it was best not to expect too much besides good cameras and on-line software updates. Everything else was game for experimentation in how not to experience cutting edge specs and features.
If you are looking forward to the next Samsung flagship, you know you will be getting the most advanced and most powerful of everything possible (sans the fastest battery charging). You could not be sure with Google.
Like Google, like Nokia
One other phone maker has been aping this habit of crippling their devices: Nokia. And it will hurt them. There is no reason why the Nokia X20 , for example, should be using a Snapdragon 480 chipset and 18w charging, when competing devices at its price point use much more powerful chipsets and have even faster charging standards.
As we are seeing, Google is breaking away from that practice of limiting its devices. One can only hope that Nokia adjusts too fast enough. The Nokia brand name is still fairly powerful, especially among older mobile users, but it won’t be enough to keep people from comparing specs and wondering why they are getting much less than phones from competitors.
Pixel 6 Pro: taking the leash off
But from what we have seen this year, 2021 seems to be the year that the company wants to shed that reputation. The Pixel 6 Pro is a proper premium flagship: it even has 12 GB of RAM! Shock! Horror! With previous models, minus the Pixel 5, you had to manage 6 GB RAM at the most.
Even in the photography department that Google was once celebrated, over the last few years, the Pixel phones lost massive ground to competing devices that came to the fight with their own versions of computational Photography and multiple cameras. Google was stuck with dual cameras on their devices and those could no longer compete in a world of triple and quad cameras on cutting edge devices. Again, the Pixel 6 Pro changed that by showing up with a triple camera at the back.
The Pixel 6 Pro is a breath of fresh air. We have a top-end Pixel device with a flagship-grade chipset, a copious amount of RAM, a hefty battery, and competitive cameras, among other things. The Pixel line never looked so good. In more ways than one, the 2021 Pixel 6 Pro is a paradigm change for Google phones.
The lesson here is similar to the lesson with Apple in the last few years of the iPhone: no matter how distinct and unique you seek to make your products, you have to at the very least bend to the demands of the market to stay competitive. Dayo and I love how Google has adapted to the market’s demands with the Pixel 6 Pro.
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Author:Mister Mobility
Digital Skills and Communication Coach | Mobile Phone Connoisseur since 2001 | Tech Blogging since 2004