Nokia Lumia 625 review: A big Lumia with a medium price

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CNET Editors' Rating

3.0 stars Good

CNET Editors' Rating

3.0 stars Good
  • Overall rating: 6.7
  • Design: 7.0
  • Features: 6.0
  • Performance: 7.0
Review Date:

Average User Rating

0.0 stars No reviews. Write a review

The good: The Nokia Lumia 625's 4.7-inch screen makes for effortless viewing, and the $300 price tag its wallet-friendly for an unlocked phone. Depending on your area, it also supports LTE.

The bad: For a phone of its size, the Lumia 625's too-low resolution is fuzzy and dull compared to premium Lumias. The 625's 5-megapixel camera struggles taking photos in the shade.

The bottom line: Despite a few faults, the Lumia 625’s smooth, higher-end design and solid performance make it a great value for the price.

The Nokia Lumia 625 is neither a premium or budget device, but instead a little bit of both.

This midrange phone comes with features normally spotted on the premium Lumia 820, 920, and 1020, including LTE (where available), a solid, sleek build, a promised long-lasting battery, and a Gorilla Glass 2 screen.

On the other hand, the 625 has little internal storage and RAM, a low-resolution display, a 5-megapixel camera, and no NFC, most of which are characteristics of the lower-end Lumia 520, 521, and 620.

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In a way, you're getting the best of both worlds; since Nokia borrowed features from each end of the Lumia line, the 625 has a luxury feel at a reasonable 220 euro ($295 US) price tag.

Unfortunately, the Lumia 625 will never officially debut with a US carrier. The phone goes on sale in the third quarter of 2013 in Europe, Asia, India, the Middle East, Africa, and Latin America.

Lumia 625

The Lumia 625 is the biggest phone in the Lumia line.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

Design and build
The most defining feature of the Lumia 625 is its size. The phone is largest Lumia Nokia has built, at 5 inches tall with a 4.7-inch screen. At that size, you have a lot of screen to work with, yet the phone is still small enough to slip into a pants pocket or purse.

The Lumia 625 might be big, but you can still slide it into a pants pocket.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

Officially, the Lumia 625 measures in at 5.2 inches by 2.8 inches by 0.36 inch (133 x 72 x 9 mm) and weighs 5.6 ounces (159 grams), which makes it about as big and heavy as the Lumia 1020. It's not the thinnest or lightest Lumia, but it doesn't feel bulky, thanks to its slim profile and rounded sides.

Nokia has a penchant for making its phones bright and colorful, which you can easily see on the 625. It's hard to miss its almost neon-colored back cover that comes in a reddish-orange, yellow, and green. If you'd rather your phone fit in instead of stand out, you can opt for the black or white back covers. The Lumia 625 I tested had the red-orange back cover.

Lumia 625

This bright back cover comes in red-orange, yellow, green, black, and white.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

That back cover is made of curved matte polycarbonate that's smooth, yet easy to grip. Though the cover is thin, it feels sturdy when you pop it off the phone to reveal the battery and the microSD and Micro-SIM slots. You can't remove the battery, as it's embedded in the device, but the card slots are stacked on top of each other on the right side of the phone and are easy to access.

All of the physical buttons are along the right-hand side of the 625.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

In keeping with the Lumia style, all of the phone's physical buttons are all on the right side. From top to bottom, there's a volume rocker, power/lock button, and camera button. The slim buttons are easy to press, and feel responsive.

However, I did have a few issues. Since the volume rocker is higher up on the right side than other Lumias I've used, I had a hard time adjusting the volume when I held the phone up to my ear for a phone call. To turn up the volume on a call, I had to readjust my grip to reach the button which was annoying and awkward.

On the top edge of the 625 is the headphone jack, and on the bottom is the microUSB charging port.

Lumia 625

The 625's screen resolution isn't as sharp as other Lumias.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

Thanks to its overall bigger size, the 625 has the largest screen of all the Lumia devices, measuring at 4.7 inches diagonally. It's a IPS LCD display made of curved Gorilla Glass 2, so it's resistant (but not impervious) to cracks and scratches. The screen is also using Nokia's super sensitive technology, which means you can use it while wearing gloves or tap the screen your fingernail instead of the pad of your finger.

Though the 625's screen is impressively big, its screen resolution isn't spectacular at just 800x480 with 198 pixels per inch (Nokia says 201, but our calculations come out to 198). That's the same resolution found on the Lumia 520, 620, and 720, but all three of those phones have smaller screens that make their displays look sharper.

Compared with those Lumia phones, the 625's screen isn't as sharp and you can definitely see pixels. Some icons look fuzzy, but text is easy to read and the screen is bright inside. In direct overhead sunlight, the screen is tough to read and reflects a lot of light.

Bear in mind that Nokia isn't billing the 625 as a top-of-the-line device, so it's not surprising that the company didn't go the extra mile with the screen. Still, it's disappointing that the biggest Lumia to date is missing a high-definition display that could have made the 4.7-inch screen look much richer.

OS and features
The Lumia 625 is running Windows Phone 8, which comes with a few neat features, including access to your Xbox account and the People Hub, which brings all your friend's social updates from across the Web into one central app.

Lumia 625

Windows Phone 8's tile interface on the 625.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

Nokia also added its own apps to the phone, such as the Xpress browser and navigation and mapping app Here Maps. However, the 625 is missing a compass, which means you can't use augmented reality in Here Maps and the map won't rotate when you move your phone.

The 625 has the typical Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and GPS features you'd expect on a Windows Phone, but there is no wireless charging or NFC. That means you can't tap to share files with other NFC-enabled devices.

As promised by Nokia, the 625 also gets the Amber update, which adds several new features, such as camera improvements and a FM radio player. Also included in that update is an option to silence the ringer on an incoming call by flipping the phone over.

Unfortunately, the 625 misses out on one feature from Amber called Glance screen. It's an always-on lock-screen screensaver that shows the time and new notifications. Anyone who used a Nokia feature phone from several years back will likely recognize it from the older devices.

Camera and video
The Lumia 625 got the budget end of the stick with its cameras. On the back of the phone is a 5-megapixel back camera and there's a 0.3-megapixel front camera on the top-right bezel. For a frame of reference, the Lumia 820 and 920 both have 8-plus megapixel cameras.

Lumia 625

This 5-megapixel camera has a single LED flash.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)

That back camera doesn't have a Carl Zeiss lens and with only 5 megapixels, the photo quality just doesn't measure up to other Lumia cameras. In the standard CNET studio shot, the photo looks grainy in places and there's an obvious brown tint in the photo.

Lumia 625

In our studio shot, you can see that the 625's camera doesn't pick up detail very well.

(Credit: Josh Miller/CNET)
 

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Quick Specifications

  • Release date07/23/13
  • Weight 5.61 oz
  • Diagonal screen size 4.7 in

Sarah Mitroff is a CNET associate editor, reviewing Microsoft software and gadgets. She loves pretty space photos, the San Francisco Giants, and apps that organize the recipes she compulsively hoards. Full Bio