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The UMIDIGI A5 will arrive at the end of May with three rear-facing cameras

The UMIDIGI A5 will arrive at the end of May with three rear-facing cameras

We don’t know the price yet, but knowing the company, you probably won’t have to leave your monthly salary at the checkout.

The UMIDIGI A5 will arrive at the end of May with three rear-facing cameras

UMIDIGI has been pushing hard lately, launching its phones in a row, which are definitely similar to each other, surprisingly cheap compared to the hardware in them.

UMIDIGI A5 Pro 2

After the UMIDIGI S3 Pro, UMIDIGI F1 Play and UMIDIGI Power, an A 5 pro mobile will now debut with mid-range hardware and lots of cameras. According to the news, the central unit will be a Helio P23, next to which we will have 4 GB of system memory and 32 GB of built-in storage, the latter can be expanded with up to 256 GB of memory cards. The display will be large with a diagonal of 6,3 inches and a resolution of FHD +, which is 2280 x 1080 pixels. The display of the completely frameless phone is broken only by a single tiny, drop-shaped camera opening, so the display-front ratio is outstandingly good at 92,7 percent.

UMIDIGI A5 Pro 3

Based on what has been said so far, we can expect a pleasant mid-range phone, but its real curiosity will be on the back. And this is nothing more than three cameras. The layout and the type of cameras are the usual. The main camera will work with a 16-megapixel Sony IMX398 sensor, next to it will be a megapixel auxiliary camera that will serve as a depth sensor, and a third will be an 8-megapixel ultra-wide-angle camera with a 120-degree viewing angle. The interesting thing about the main camera is that it has an aperture of f / 1.8, so we can expect to take pleasant quality photos with it.

UMIDIGI A5 Pro 4

As we wrote the price is not yet known. The official date for the debut is May 21, but we don't know yet when it will arrive in our preferred stores. 

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Owner of the HOC.hu website. He is the author of hundreds of articles and thousands of news. In addition to various online interfaces, he has written for Chip Magazine and also for the PC Guru. For a time, he ran his own PC shop, working for years as a store manager, service manager, system administrator in addition to journalism.