Asus Zenfone Selfie review: Vanity light

Vanity light

GSMArena team, 6 November, 2015.

Phonebook covers the basics, adds some

The Zenfone Selfie uses a combined interface for the phonebook and dialer. Out of the box it's laid out across five tabs - Telephone (dialer), Favorites, Contacts, Groups and Call Guard, for managing blocked numbers.

You can however edit the tabs and remove ones you don't use for a less cluttered interface. You can also add another tab, dubbed VIP for those among your contacts with a special status. Out of the six possible tabs you can have up to five at a time, and Telephone and Contacts cannot be removed, for rather obvious reasons.

Side-swiping lets you switch between those without needing to reach for the top, welcome on a sizeable 5.5-inch device.

You can display all your available contacts, or limit the list to the ones in your Google account, either of your SIM cards or the phone's internal memory. You also get quick access to a specific letter from the alphabet as well as a search box with voice search capability.

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Contacts

Opening a single contact gives a quick glimpse over the available means of communication with that person. Tapping on the pencil in top right corner reveals the usual myriad of options for editing with virtually every detail getting a dedicated field.

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Contact editing

Telephony

There's no separate call log tab, instead it's combined with the dialer, and sits underneath the num pad. That one can be easily hidden though with a tap on the icon in bottom left. The call log gives you an option to show the calls by categories or all of them together, as well as a dedicated list for the VIP calls.

It's a dual-SIM smartphone, and as such the Zenfone Selfie offers a choice of options on how to handle the two cards. Within the settings menu you can enable/disable each of the SIMs, and also assign a name for easier distinction. Obviously, you can specify which one is used for different tasks such as voice calls or data transfer. Otherwise you'll get two call buttons below the num pad.

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Dialer and call log • In-call display • Dual SIM settings

The Asus Zenfone Selfie posted an Average score in our loudspeaker test. While it is an improvement over the Zenfone 2, it's still not loud enough to guarantee you won't be missing notifications in noisy environments.

Speakerphone testVoice, dB Pink noise/ Music, dB Ringing phone, dB Overall score
HTC One E9+ 61.7 62.2 66.8 Below Average
Asus Zenfone 2 ZE551ML 62.9 61.7 67.7 Below Average
Motorola Nexus 6 66.5 66.2 66.3 Below Average
HTC Desire Eye 65.7 65.3 74.2 Average
Sony Xperia C4 65.0 65.8 75.7 Average
Asus Zenfone Selfie ZD551KL 65.9 66.1 75.7 Average
Huawei Ascend Mate7 66.7 65.7 75.7 Good
Samsung Galaxy A8 66.7 66.6 75.7 Good
Motorola Moto X Play 69.8 66.6 75.7 Good
LG G3 70.2 66.6 80.2 Good
Sony Xperia C5 Ultra 69.8 66.6 82.7 Very Good
Sony Xperia C4 (ClearAudio+ enabled) 71.1 70.5 79.9 Very Good
Sony Xperia C5 Ultra (ClearAudio) 72.7 66.6 82.7 Very Good
OnePlus One 74.8 73.5 80.2 Excellent
OnePlus 2 75.7 73.5 80.7 Excellent


Messaging, email and text input

The generic Messaging app on the Zenfone Selfie offers straightforward texts with Asus's take on design, and works well. You can attach a picture or a video or a number of other items and that automatically turns it into an MMS message.

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Messaging app

The Zenfone Selfie comes with the common set of two email apps, the generic Android Email one, albeit tastefully skinned by Asus, and Gmail. They offer largely the same functionality, with similar interface and support for multiple accounts.

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Asus-skinned Email app • Gmail

There's a single keyboard installed on the Zenfone Selfie, dubbed Asus Keyboard. It's not lacking in functionality and has a separate number row, which is handy, while still allowing for plenty of usable screen estate. Secondary symbols are also available, for quick punctuation or old-school emoticons without changing the entire layout.

It comes in three sizes, but Tall takes up more than half the screen and is a bit excessive. Most users will likely stick with Normal or even Short, which still provides adequate size.

It's swipe-enabled, although Asus calls it trace input, but the concept is the same. Flick input lets you change between upper and lower case simply by taping on the key and flicking in up for uppercase and down for lowercase - a nifty feature, saving you a tap on the dedicated button. Trace and Flick can't work together, though.

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Asus Keyboard comes in three different sizes and with secondary symbols

Reader comments

  • Anonymous
  • 01 Jun 2018
  • 2SD

no infrared

  • nithin
  • 01 Jun 2018
  • 2SD

Good phone with very bad battery life. 1 star rating is also too much for its battery. 99% Asus phones fails to make battery life atleast average. Gaming also too bad.

  • Anonymous
  • 18 May 2018
  • Dkc

this is the worst phone i have ever seen with cost of 14000 Rs. (at launched time) except camera department all other is dump.....it does not mean that camera is very good at all, picture quality is fab..but processing time is very poor...and custome...