PhoneArena Awards 2012 Worst Phone

LG Intuition
The LG Intuition, also known as the LG Optimus Vu in its homeland of Korea, was the company’s attempt to enter the realm of jumbo-sized smartphones, where the Samsung Galaxy Note II dominates to this day. Unfortunately, LG’s offering failed to win our hearts for a number of reasons, the most prominent of them being its sheer size. Yeah, we know that the Note II is gigantic as well, but at least it is narrow enough to be held with a single hand, whereas the Intuition would feel awkward even if handled by an NBA star.
BlackBerry Curve 9310
What you’re looking at is the best phone RIM managed to release during the entire 2012 – the BlackBerry Curve 9310. And given that it is just a humble handset inferior to the 2011 ‘Berrys, with mediocre specs, tiny screen, and outdated interface, we feel sorry for anyone who has spent $50 on one of them instead of, let’s say, picking an Android alternative. The only advantages that you get with the Curve 9310 are the hardware keyboard and the access to BBM, but with the way competing smartphone platforms are developing, these perks are gradually becoming less and less significant.
Samsung Brightside
The Samsung Brightside was a disappointment on multiple levels, but its biggest flaw was its outrageous $100 on-contract price tag. This figure would have probably been tolerable if we were dealing with a mid-range Android device, but it is just way too much for a feature phone, especially when it doesn’t have anything to stand out with, other than its slide-out QWERTY keyboard. To no surprise, third-party retailers quickly picked it up at much more acceptable prices, down to zero dollars on a 2-year agreement.
Honorable mentions: Samsung Galaxy Nexus (Verizon) and Samsung Galaxy Note (T-Mobile)
Before you start bashing us in the comments for adding these two smartphones on our list, allow us to explain why we decided to mention them. The Samsung Galaxy Nexus is supposed to deliver pure, unaltered Google experience, just like any other Nexus device. It should also get the latest software updates soon after they are officially announced.
As for the T-Mobile Samsung Galaxy Note, its problem lied elsewhere. You see, customers hate it when they buy an expensive new smartphone, or any other high-tech product, for that matter, only to have their device succeeded by a newer model in a matter of weeks. Sadly, that’s what happened to those who purchased a Samsung Galaxy Note from T-Mobile.
PhoneArena Awards 2012 Worst Phone
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