LG Thrill 4G review

mobile

The Thrill 4G is the second Android smartphone in the United States capable of recording and displaying 3D video and photos without the need for special glasses. We first saw the phone during CTIA earlier this year and, after delays, it will launch soon on AT&T for $99.99. I spent the better part of the last three weeks carrying the LG Thrill 4G everywhere I went. Are the 3D effects useful and fun or are they just a lame gimmick? Does the “4G” in its name equate to faster data speeds or does it surf on a par with 3G phones? All of this and more is answered in my review, so hit the read link to get started.

Hardware

The LG Thrill 4G is identical to its European cousin, the LG Optimus 3D, in nearly every way. It’s equipped with a 4.3-inch 800 x 480-pixel screen that’s capable of displaying both 2D and 3D content on the fly. Measuring in at 5in x 2.7in x 0.47in and with a weight of 5.9oz, the Thrill 4G is a bit bulkier than other high-end smartphones on AT&T, such as the Infuse 4G, but it’s not terrible.

Despite its plastic back cover, the Thrill 4G feels very study just like its LTE counterpart, the LG Revolution. The front of the phone has black faux-brushed metal accents around the screen and AT&T ditched the matte gray back on the Optimus 3D for a more attractive matte black design with a faint cross-hatch etching. The back of the Thrill 4G is also home to two camera lenses capable of recording 3D content, and a single LED flash. There’s a 3.5mm headphone jack on the top of the Thrill 4G and microUSB and mini-HDMI hatches on the left side of the device. A single button on the right side of the phone can be pressed to quickly enter the phone’s “3D Space” application, and I wish it was a camera quick-launch button instead. AT&T also included an HDMI to mini-HDMI cable, which means you’ll be able to connect the phone up to your TV right out of the box.

The Thrill 4G is a nice package overall but I noticed two yellow splotches towards the bottom of the screen. The discoloration was most noticeable while accessing the web, since most websites have a white background. The defect is too subtle to see in the various images in this review, but it’s there. At first I assumed this was just a one-time flaw with my unit, but I noticed the same problem on my European Optimus 3D and confirmed the discoloration with another journalist, too. Perhaps the screen is responsible for AT&T’s delayed launch of the phone, although that is not confirmed. (Update: A second device from AT&T didn’t have this issue so it was clearly limited to my phone or at least an early batch.)

Software

The LG Thrill 4G runs Android 2.2 (Froyo) out of the box but AT&T has promised an Android 2.3 (Gingerbread) update is on the way. Android ran smoothly and I rarely saw any lag thanks to the phone’s dual-core 1GHz processor. LG overlays Android with its own lackluster and ugly user interface. There aren’t any worthwhile widgets aside from a decent third-party weather app, and the icons that infiltrate the status bar and the main menu are too colorful and toy-like for my tastes. The entire UI reminds me of LG’s experience on feature phones, which was never a good thing. Thankfully there are free applications such as LauncherPro that can rid your phone of the ugly icon and UI problem, but I wish LG had left this a “pure Google” experience as it did with the T-Mobile G2x. LG also added several 3D-specific applications and I’ll go over them in the following section.

3D

3D. Whenever I hear the term I immediately think I’m being sucked into a gimmick no better than a holographic trading card. I won’t even go to a 3D movie. You may remember my impressions on 3D when I reviewed the Nintendo 3DS; the display wasn’t impressive and it took away from the gaming experience in a number of titles.

The Optimus Thrill 4G definitely has a superior screen compared to the 3DS though, and since 3D is optional for the most part I, oddly enough, enjoy using it. LG included a full 3D menu that allows you to quickly browse 3D YouTube videos, 3D pictures and videos in your gallery, and fast access to 3D games.There are a couple of decent games that definitely suck you into the 3D experience. I liked playing Let’s Golf 2 in three dimensions and Fragging in Nova was also decent fun, but it wasn’t much better than playing in 2D. Additionally, there aren’t a lot of games pre-loaded, so you’ll need to buy more to keep the experience going. While there’s a YouTube application with dedicated access to 3D videos, I spent most of my time showing off the pre-loaded videos to friends and strangers in bars. The response was nearly always “that’s cool, but who cares?” And that’s the problem: who cares? 3D is somewhat exciting and it works, but at the end of the day it’s totally unnecessary.

Camera

The Thrill 4G’s camera is capable of shooting in both 2D and 3D modes. In 2D mode you can capture 5-megapixel photos and record video in 1080p HD. The stereoscopic 3D cameras are also capable of snapping 3-megapixel 3D images and recording 720p HD video in 3D. Videos came out well. In fact, here’s a video of a Jane’s Addiction concert on YouTube that was filmed entirely in 720p 3D video with a number of LG Thrill units, if you want a better sample of the camera’s quality.

The tricky part with the camera is that if you aren’t in the right light or aren’t careful enough when snapping a photo, there’s actually an overlap of two images and it looks like a blurry 3D mess. When I was careful to steady the phone and snap a photo of an object in a well lit area, the photos came out pretty well. If I held the phone in a darker area, to avoid any glare, the images didn’t appear to pop off of the screen. A shot of chips, salsa, and plates on a coffee table came out really well, as did a picture of a coffee mug on a bookshelf. Other shots, such as those taken down my street, weren’t as impressive. You’ll need to really get up close to your subject in order for it to appear to pop off of the screen. Otherwise the image looks like it has a lot of depth but it doesn’t pop off of the screen.

Another cool feature: you can take shots in 2D and then view them in 3D, although the effects are much better if you take the pictures in 3D originally. Worse, 2D pictures were often on the blurry and washed-out side (see above). Overall, I liked snapping photos better than recording video; the results came out better. Unfortunately, I didn’t have access to a 3D TV to see my home videos blown up.

Call Quality and Data

Call quality on the Thrill 4G was good during my tests. I used the phone daily for a solid two weeks to place a number of phone calls and didn’t have any complaints. I was able to hear the callers on the other end loud and clear and they said I sounded “crisp.” I dropped a couple of conversations but that’s par for the course on AT&T in New York City. One issue I did notice: the signal strength indicator would frequently jump around between two and four bars. The icon doesn’t always reflect the actual signal strength, but there could be issues with the phone’s ability to maintain a solid signal.

As its name implies, the LG Thrill 4G runs on AT&T’s HSPA+ “4G” network. I ran a number of tests with the Speedtest.net application in my apartment, where I usually run my tests, and rarely saw the phone peak over 1Mbps while running a download test. Instead, I averaged about 750Kbps, which is slower than I’ve seen with a number of 3G phones. The phone’s upload speeds were solid, however: I averaged 1.6Mbps in my upload throughput tests.

Battery

I was able to get through a full day with the Thrill 4G without a problem using the phone moderately. Obviously your mileage will vary if you’re spending more time using the 3D display or streaming video, but generally the battery was on a par with the Infuse 4G on AT&T, which is one of the longer lasting Android devices out there.

Conclusion

I like the Thrill 4G because LG tried to differentiate itself with a device that could display and record 3D content. It’s a fun concept and works in practice, but it’s hard to recommend a phone simply because it offers 3D as an option. The third dimension, as it stands in mobile, is purely for entertainment purposes, and the problem is the phone has so many other faults.

The Thrill 4G has a solid build, despite its plastic accents, but it’s far bulkier and heavier than many of its competitors. Call quality was satisfactory, but I had issues with its download speeds in New York City.

Overall, the LG Thrill 4G is just a mediocre device. You might be better served picking up a Motorola ATRIX 4G for the same $99.99 price, as it still packs a mean hardware punch. If it’s power your after though, my advice is to stick around and see how Samsung’s upcoming Galaxy S II handset for AT&T turns out.

35 Comments
  • Anonymous

    Number Juan!

  • http://profiles.google.com/downloadable getitnow getitnow

    Meh, with so many android devices flooding the market, it makes it hard to even attempt to declare a winner or a must buy…  each phone seems to be a pinch more of this, and a teaspoon less of that.  This leads to some believing android is the best platform. What it says to me is that manufacturers and carriers suck when you leave things up to them… A good phone has more than a good OS– it needs hardware that can show its chops… Perhaps Google will fix that with this Moto buyout and make a phone that is purely tops in it’s class– not more ‘also-rans’…

    • Fattie McDoogles

      I think this is one of the best critical comments about Android I’ve seen on here. I completely agree with what you’re saying. As an Android user I find that the OEM’s spend more time on marketing than they do on making a good phone. I love the openness of Android but I do wish there was more guidelines for hardware to help get rid of the 2 steps ahead in this category and 4 steps back in that one.

    • Anonymous

      You’re making an argument for less choice.  No disrespect but its up to consumers to sift through the devices and find one that meets their needs.  There are many, many good and bad Android phones and that choice, quite frankly is the appeal of the OS.  The Samsung Galaxy II is an amazing device.  It’s blazing fast and does everything well but it may not be for everyone.  The good news is if you don’t like it, you can choose something else.

    • Anonymous

      Traditionally, economists have argued that having more choices can never make one less happy (and probably makes them happier).  More recent results from the behavioral economics literature suggest that having to choose induces some unhappiness in a subset of people (“the paradox of choice”).  Certain people, it seems, fear making the wrong choice more than they dislike not having a choice at all.  It seems that you fall in the latter group, but it would be wrong to assume that everyone else does too.

  • Anonymous

    Don’t know what’s keeping AT&T … here in canada this phone has been out for a while but in the carriers store it’s next to an Evo 3D … i know which one i’d choose

    • BurleyShells

      I think canada is ahead of the us in launches other than the iphone. I saw a sgs2 yesterday on virgin and it was the european style hardware, not butchered by carriers

      • Anonymous

        In a way Canada is far ahead of the US in not just launches but compatibility. All our phones work on all the (big) carriers . So with us i’d be like “Oh i want an Evo 3D on verizon and a droid 3 on sprint” Since all of ours on compatible we can do that choose the network and but the phone then unlock it. And their all going LTE

        However we have three year contracts if you roll that way -_-

        Also my view is the iPhone was only released in the states first then us because of supply issues like with the iPad 2

    • BurleyShells

      I think canada is ahead of the us in launches other than the iphone. I saw a sgs2 yesterday on virgin and it was the european style hardware, not butchered by carriers

  • Anonymous

    Hah, pretty funny.  Jane’s Addiction selling out to a Korean consumer electronics firm.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_T3NRV5OOEQS5Y52QG6WG6SMTEU ML

    Where’s richard yarell?  Queue the “evo 3D is the best” spiel.

  • Anonymous

    Issues with download speeds in NYC?  That’s just par for the course in NYC on AT&T…heck 750mbps/down is mind-boggling here (must have been outside strapped to a cell tower at 4am on a Tuesday during a downpour to get that result).

    • Anonymous

      sorry, i meant kbps

      • Ikissedagirlabdshebitme

        A downpour would actually make it worse stupid. Cell phones are affected by weather. Kinda of like how your stupidity affected all of us reading your comment.

      • BurleyShells

        LMAO

      • Anonymous

        back to your sandbox…

  • Fattie McDoogles

    Great review. Thanks.

  • Anonymous

    Not impressed with 3D on a phone, rather not have it.

  • Skyy_flyer86

    Here’s hoping that they will still make powerful phones without going to 3D because with my astigmatism I can’t see it. I have “seen” 3D televisions, phones, game systems, and every single time the picture is just a blurry clusterfuc*. 

  • BurleyShells

    hey that looks like every other android phone. why must they butcher every phone with those same 4 buttons at the bottom?

  • BurleyShells

    hey that looks like every other android phone. why must they butcher every phone with those same 4 buttons at the bottom?

  • http://twitter.com/computer_tweets KW

    The wine in the background looks more interesting than the phone.

  • http://pulse.yahoo.com/_G7BADNGHA72GR77IJI6YNHB5AU Gilda Maddox

    I just paíd $22.85 for an íPad 2-64GB and my girlfriend loves her her Canon EOS Rebel Camera that we got for $38.78 there arriving tomorrow by UPS. I will never pay such expensive retail prices in stores again. Especially when I also sold a 40 inch LED TV to my boss for $625 which only cost me $62.81 to buy. Here is the website we use to get it all from, CentHúb.çom

  • unsatisfied at&t customer

    ANOTHER PUSH BACK! AT&T is by far the worst company in my opinion when it comes to the
    release of devices, add that to the fact that they pretty much suck at
    everything else and I’d say they’re a stand up company. I’m tired of
    waiting for this phone, I might as well take my money to Sprint and just
    get the EVO 3D. What’s the hold up StupidT&T? Ever thinking about
    making your loyal customers happy or just making your pockets happy? 

  • unsatisfied at&t customer

    ANOTHER PUSH BACK! AT&T is by far the worst company in my opinion when it comes to the
    release of devices, add that to the fact that they pretty much suck at
    everything else and I’d say they’re a stand up company. I’m tired of
    waiting for this phone, I might as well take my money to Sprint and just
    get the EVO 3D. What’s the hold up StupidT&T? Ever thinking about
    making your loyal customers happy or just making your pockets happy?  

  • unsatisfied at&t customer

    Who wants a phone that keeps getting pushed back? Every other day there’s a delay, is there something wrong with the phone? Are upgrades happening? Are they giving away free puppies with it? WTF AT&T!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • http://profiles.google.com/robaymett Rob Aymett

    Wow… AT&T markets 1Mbps as “4G”? I use that same device on T-Mobile’s 3G network (no T-Mo 4G built in) and get 6-7 Mbps…

  • Anonymous

    More of the same…SMH

  • http://www.facebook.com/endre.grunzo Endre Grunzo

    You recommend that people wait for the Galaxy S II. As an ex-owner of a Samsung Galaxy S II, I can tell you how that’s gonna be ( funny how we’ve had it available for 4 months now in Romania, and you still haven’t got it in the US :)  

    The SGS II is a very shitty phone, mainly due to its horrendously bad display. It suffers from extremely warm tones, to the extent that any white is yellow, and a person’s skin, for example, looks like they’re seriously ill. Then there’s the awful camera, which takes washed out pics and blurry, cropped, out of focus videos of an unjustifiably large size. Another big downer is the phone’s poor battery life, but the list could go on and on. Basically, any good hardware features that the phone may have, the OS does not take advantage of. I guess I shouldn’t have spoiled it for you, but..oh well..:)

  • Guest

    Anyone having problems sending sms messages?   After i click send and hit back or home to leave the thread the message takes for ever to send, if it will send at all. I must remain in the thread for the message to send. Help please!

  • TheTROOF

    I’ve had the phone for 3wks.. glitchy as hell. During calls i can’t get out of the call screen keeps cutting on/off (proximity sensor issue most likely), screen freezes at times, it’s still 2.2 which sucks and doesn’t work with Netflix, the web browser sucks with the snapshot of previously visited screens and defaults to mobile version, and the bluetooth loses connection with my Jabra(no problem with any other phones)….. RETURNING IT. P.O.S.

  • Pamluvzd

    can u use flash when using 3d camera i have been trying but no luck

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