Well, not that curious given Sony is releasing a slew of phones with the number 3 appended, but it does mean some consumers might be a little confused.
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One of the cool things to make it over from the larger phones is the corner protection - this isn't a metal phone, but it still has the same nylon covers to keep it from being damaged through drops.
The Omnibalance design makes an appearance again, and the bezels above and below the screen are a chunky as ever. I'm still not sure why Sony keeps doing such a thing with its phones, as it doesn't look great, and with a 4.5-inch display on the Xperia E3, it's hardly like the phone needs to be as large.
That said, there are some interesting high-end elements to talk about here, especially as they're things you wouldn't expect to find in a phone that's challenging some of the cheapest handsets around. HDR mode in the 5MP camera is a welcome addition, and although the snaps I took were nowhere near the brightness and quality of the Z range, they weren't terrible.
One of the coolest features of the new E3 is the shake to start function, which allows you to set an app that's woken by just shaking the phone. Sadly, Sony didn't tell me about this so I couldn't check it out - but it looks like it will be a strong novelty that will appeal to the youth market, at which this phone is so clearly aimed.
There's no waterproofing here though - sadly it's not going to survive a dunking in a pool or drin k. The plus side of this is the back is removable... although all this does is give access to the microSD slot and SIM card, with the battery still bolted in.
If you were hoping that this low-end phone could play PS4 games in the same vein as the other devices on show from Sony at IFA 2014, well, bad news. It's not happening, presumably due to the fact the CPU/GPU mix won't allow it.
It's not a bad processor under the hood, with a quad-core Qualcomm Snapdragon 400 CPU powering things along with 1GB of RAM. Sadly we're only treated to 8GB of onboard storage too, but that can be augmented with the aforementioned microSD slot.
The battery is pretty large for a phone of this calibre though, with a 2330mAh option combined with Stamina Mo de in order to help it last longer whether you're watching movies or playing games.
Even the lower-res of the screen (the old school 854x480 pixels) didn't mean a poor movie watching experience, with the colours still pretty rich and clear. There's no doubt it's not going to impress anyone looking at the phone, but the mere fact you won't have to sell your first born to afford it should allay some of those fears.
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