Sometimes I
despair, I really do. Just when you think that the madness has come to some
sort of logical end, someone proves you wrong. Samsung did that rather
emphatically when it announced a pair of Galaxy Mega handsets that
take what the company did with the Note and Note II and then, well, make it
bigger.
The Galaxy Mega handsets, for those
that have managed to avoid these abominations, are Samsung’s new super large
handsets that dwarf even the already mahoosive Note II. That oversized
phone weighs in with a considerable 5.5-inch screen, which might seem large.
That’s because it undoubtedly is, but someone at Samsung obviously deemed that
to not be quite large enough, and instead set about making something larger.
Twice.
The first Mega
packs a 5.8-inch display, so 0.3-inches larger than Samsung’s current largest
phone. That’s not inconsiderable, but there’s more. More screen, at least. See,
Samsung’s other Mega handset’s screen is even larger at 6.3-inches. Let me put
that another way. It’s BIG. Whether it’s too big will depend on what you want
it for, and how big your hands are, but I’d argue it’s just the wrong side of
too big by about two inches!
The company’s own flagship device,
the Galaxy S4 sits at a reasonable 5-inches. Not small by any stretch of the
imagination, the Galaxy S4 is still a whole inch larger than the other big
player in the smartphone market – Apple’s iPhone 5. Is the iPhone too small? Is
the Mega just ridiculously oversized? Is the Galaxy S4 just right? Take a look
at this image and see how the 6.3-inch Mega compares to the iPhone 5:
Horribly massive
isn’t it?
Beyond the
horrendous Goldilocks metaphor, it’s a question that’s worth asking. In fact,
it’s potentially a question that will get answered when all three (well, four
if we’re counting both Megas) are on sale and customers vote with their
wallets. The iPhone will always sell because, well, it’s an iPhone. The Galaxy
S4 will always sell because it’s arguably going to be the best Android phone
around if you’re shopping at the premium end of the market. The Mega? Well, the
smaller model’s just close enough to a Note II to be mildly redundant, and its
big brother is potentially just too big for anyone to take too seriously. In a
world where carriers and manufacturers seem convinced that bigger is better,
will customers agree when faced with a phone that’s almost as large as a small
tablet?
Beyond the
inevitable phablet commentary here, I just don’t see where the Mega fits into a
market that’s already crowded, unless that’s the whole point: differentiation.
And Samsung’s certainly managed that
with the Galaxy Mega. Different is just one of the words I’d use to describe
it! [Source]
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