We welcome the Pixel range into South Africa with the lovable 4a 5G. It’s one of the most humble devices to grace our desks, and we will recommend the 4a to anyone who doesn’t want to buy into flashy smartphone marketing techniques. Here you get pure Android, ample power to do your daily dues, a camera more-than-capable to capture life’s best moments and just enough tech that shouldn't confuse you. All for (around) R10,000.|We welcome the Pixel range into South Africa with the lovable 4a 5G. It’s one of the most humble devices to grace our desks, and we will recommend the 4a to anyone who doesn’t want to buy into flashy smartphone marketing techniques. Here you get pure Android, ample power to do your daily dues, a camera more-than-capable to capture life’s best moments and just enough tech that shouldn't confuse you. All for (around) R10,000.|We welcome the Pixel range into South Africa with the lovable 4a 5G. It’s one of the most humble devices to grace our desks, and we will recommend the 4a to anyone who doesn’t want to buy into flashy smartphone marketing techniques. Here you get pure Android, ample power to do your daily dues, a camera more-than-capable to capture life’s best moments and just enough tech that shouldn't confuse you. All for (around) R10,000.
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Sometimes, techies perched on the plains in Southern Africa sit and dream of a day we can get our hands on Google’s proprietary hardware. We’re happy to announce that day is upon us. It may be through third-party retailers, but we don’t ask questions. Capish?
According to our sibling publication over in the UK, Google’s best kit is generally its cheapest kit. The Google Pixel 4 launched in 2019 and still retails for around R15,000 (it really depends where you look, though). While the following Pixel 5 is also priced in the mid-teens of thousands, the Pixel 4a is humbly priced at around R10,000. That makes it a decent midranger according to our calculations.
It also has 5G, so there’s that.
This is the second instance of a more affordable Pixel, which means Google’s gone and perfected the outcome even further. The Pixel 4a combines the best parts from the premium Pixel 4 with fewer gimmicks and a lekker price tag. Of course, you can’t expect flagship-level specs here, but the Pixel 4a is a brilliant addition to anyone keen on a brilliant camera and a vanilla Android experience.
Remember it’s a tool
At first glance, it’ll be hard to know which Android-faced device this is, as its subtle looks and boring form-factor does anything but make a statement. Pixels have historically focused on brains over looks, and the same is true here.
Here you’ve got a compact polycarbonate body that doesn’t feel cheap. There’s a satisfying heft, considering its size, even if it isn’t especially skinny. Along the back, you’ll find the fingerprint sensor — an odd choice when most of us have ditched our 2016 handsets featuring the same. But it’s snappy, easy to target with your indicator and feels smooth to the touch. So we’ll let that one slide.
The square camera housing mimics the Pixel 4, although it only holds a single sensor here instead of two. And it protrudes just a bit too far for our taste, so opt for a case if you’re OCD about camscratchies.
Bring the boom
We also welcome the OLED 1080p panel that doesn’t bleed around the edges (great for a device in this price range), and features decent colour reproduction all-round. It does struggle in especially bright scenarios, however, which is a thumbs-down for anyone trying to send a WhatsApp under the South African sun.
Then there are the onboard speakers (one reader suggested we specifically start mentioning this again — this one’s for you). The stereo setup combines a down-firing main speaker with the phone earpiece — which means you get a good balance and impressive clarity. Vocals sound clear, and there’s even a bit of bass. Once you push the volume, there’s noticeable resonance through the handset. Serious listening still calls for headphones, but the audio gods smiled upon us with a 3.5 audio jack this time around. You’re welcome.
Snapping up jewels
It’s not easy testing a dual-sensor cam after numerous bouts with multi-sensor cameras. But this feels… simple. In a good way too. Here you get a single 12.2MP sensor, along with the ultra-wide cam mentioned above. It’s all backed up with some of the best image processing in the business. Still today, it takes pictures that’ll easily compete with those taken on any Samsung, Apple or Huawei device.
Portrait mode copes well without relying on a depth sensor for edge detection, and the 8MP front-facing camera takes a great selfie, although it’s a little more vulnerable to noise in low-light which is expected considering the size of it, really.
Night Sight produces images that are easily on par with the class leaders (Apple’s night mode and Huawei’s night shooting). Astrophotography mode also returns from the Pixel 4, and the four-minute exposure still warrants a tripod, but in the right conditions, results can be incredible for a phone.
While photography flex is high on the 4a, it’s not lining up to shoot a Hollywood film anytime soon. It makes do with 4K at 30fps, or 1080p at 60.
A serving of vanilla
None of us like bloatware, but if you’re ready to commit to a device that’ll never allow bloatware on its platform, check any Pixel on the market. The same is true for the 4a.
You still get the oh-so-soft on the eyes system-wide dark mode, streamlined sharing menu and a Focus mode that mutes distracting apps while you’re trying to get work done, the 4a now pulls up Google Pay with a long press of the power button.
Also making an appearance is something called Google Recorder, which can perform spookily accurate live transcriptions. Those transcripts can then be searched via Google Assistant. It’s not all-that-surprising if you consider Google’s been collecting voice data for years.
Of course, you’ll be the first to get software updates directly from Google, which is more anyone else currently in SA can really say right now.
Pixel perfect, really
Just because the 4a uses a Snapdragon 765G 5G, doesn’t mean it’s not the best small midranger around. Clock speeds aren’t quite as zippy as the flagship sibling, but it makes up with its desire to please its user.
The most demanding games in the Play Store run smoothly enough, with Call of Duty Mobile defaulting to ‘high’ details and keeping frame rates fairly consistent. The 60Hz panel and Full HD+ resolution don’t tax the hardware too much.
Because it’s pushing its own applications, Google would rather you pay for a Drive subscription than try to increase storage. So you’re capped at 128GB if you’re not keen on subscriptions, unfortunately.
When it comes to battery life, you should get up to a day of mixed-use, from social scrolling to selfies and streaming, but you’ll want to plug in by bedtime.
Google Pixel 4a 5G Verdict
We welcome the Pixel range into South Africa with the lovable 4a 5G. It’s one of the most humble devices to grace our desks, and we will recommend the 4a to anyone who doesn’t want to buy into flashy smartphone marketing techniques.
Here you get pure Android, ample power to do your daily dues, a camera more-than-capable to capture life’s best moments and just enough tech that shouldn’t confuse you. All for (anything from) R10,000.
- The review device was supplied by flipphones.co.za