Reviews

HONOR 400 review: Built for moments you’ll want to keep

Is this the best smartphone for those who feel things?

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There’s something about being in a familiar city that makes you want to document everything — the first bowl of beef noodle soup, the way the light hits a temple roof at golden hour, or how you look standing against a mural in a backstreet café.

So when I flew to Taipei with the HONOR 400, I had one mission: shoot my trip entirely with it.

Sleek and understated

The HONOR 400 looks sleek, almost understated, with soft curves and a smooth matte finish that felt great in the hand, even after hours of shooting and walking around Taipei.

It slipped easily into my crossbody bag. It never felt bulky, and most importantly, didn’t look like a budget phone at all.

The design language is clean and modern. The camera module is subtle but stylish, and the phone’s overall build strikes a nice balance: light enough to carry all day, sturdy enough to not feel fragile.

Whether I was snapping portraits in Taichung or waiting for trains at Taipei Main, it felt like the kind of phone you can take anywhere without worry.

Phone for under the sun

I didn’t realize how much I’d appreciate the HONOR 400’s display until I spent an entire afternoon editing photos at a street café. The screen is sharp, vibrant, and bright enough for outdoor use — even under Taiwan’s harsh afternoon sun.

Colors looked natural, not oversaturated, and the blacks were deep enough for viewing night portraits and moody street shots.

What I really loved is HONOR’s eye comfort features. With PWM dimming and built-in eye protection modes, the screen felt noticeably easier on my eyes during long days of scrolling, editing, and navigating maps. I never got that dry, fatigued feeling I usually associate with midrange phones during travel.

Pocket travel camera

The HONOR 400’s biggest highlight is its 200MP main camera, which gives you sharp, detailed shots in daylight, with enough resolution to crop in or print your photos.

It’s paired with a 2MP depth sensor that helps enhance background blur for portraits. And you’ll actually use it, thanks to HONOR’s refined AI Portrait Mode.

Colors are vibrant but not overdone, and skin tones are treated with care, giving you flattering but natural-looking results.

Up front, the 50MP selfie camera is a standout. It handles exposure well, even in mixed lighting, and HONOR’s built-in beautification feels balanced, just enough to smooth skin without looking artificial.

My travel companion

Like its predecessors, the HONOR 400 instantly became my pocket travel camera. This is the part where it shines, and where I really fell in love with it.

HONOR 400

The AI Portrait Mode made every travel selfie and candid moment feel like a scene from a movie. Skin tones were on point, the bokeh looked natural, and portraits had a softness that felt more editorial than artificial. Daylight, backlight, low light — it adapted impressively.

HONOR 400

But it’s not just about portraits. HONOR packed in creative tools I actually wanted to use.

Film Simulation Mode turned quiet alley shots and rainy-day cafés into nostalgic film stills. The color grading felt cinematic,  like VSCO, but native and instant.

Then, there’s Harcourt Portrait Mode, inspired by classic French photography, that gave my portraits a moody, black-and-white drama that felt more Vogue than Instagram.

AI-generated edits offered surprisingly tasteful touch-ups from enhancing skies to adjusting shadows. It’s the kind of automation that doesn’t feel lazy, just helpful.

Even videos turned out great. I filmed some walk-throughs of night markets and temple visits, and the stabilization and focus tracking held up well for social-ready footage.

A lifesaver for the forgetful

I have mixed feelings about HONOR 400’s Image-to-Video AI.

On one hand, it’s incredibly convenient, especially for someone like me who always forgets to take videos.

HONOR 400

On my trip to Taipei, I snapped dozens of photos: café corners, neon signs, fleeting moments with people I care about. With just a few taps, the phone’s AI turned those stills into a beautiful highlight reel.

Photo taken using the HONOR 400 | Image-to-Video AI

HONOR 400

Photo taken using the HONOR 400 | Image-to-Video AI

But here’s the thing: I’ve also seen how this kind of feature can be misused. People can stitch together videos of old flames, painful moments, even things they were trying to forget. I used to be wary of that — still am, to an extent. But this time, I saw it differently.

Photo taken using the iPhone 13 | Image-to-Video AI by HONOR 400

Photo taken using the iPhone 13 | Image-to-Video AI by HONOR 400

We always think we’ll remember. The way our friends laughed in that one café. The silence shared on a late-night drive. That one glance from someone we loved. But most of those moments live only as photos — if anything at all.

Photo taken using the iPhone 13 | Image-to-Video AI by HONOR 400

No movement and no sound. There were just still frames of what once was. With the Image-to-Video AI on the HONOR 400, I was able to breathe life into those stills, even for photos I took a year ago using my iPhone.

Not to recreate the past but to remember it more clearly. To see how we lived, even in the quiet in-between moments. This isn’t about reliving the past. It’s about honoring it, with a good heart and without regret.

Lasted with me for a day

Between GPS, gallery browsing, photo editing, and hours of camera use, I expected the battery to drain fast — but the HONOR 400 lasted me an entire day, consistently.

Even on a day trip at Taichung, which is two hours away via High-Speed Rail to Nangang District, I ended with less than 20% battery by bedtime.

And when I needed to top up, the fast charging got me back to 70% in just over 30 minutes — enough for another half-day of exploring.

Performance-wise, it’s solid for everyday use. Apps launched quickly, switching between Lightroom and Google Maps was smooth, and I never felt any major stutter.

It’s not a gaming phone, but for creators and travelers like me, it holds up just fine.

Is the HONOR 400 your GadgetMatch?

The HONOR 400 isn’t trying to be a flagship killer. It’s trying to be your favorite everyday phone and honestly, it might just succeed.

If you love taking real, emotional, and unfiltered portraits of people, then, this phone is worth your attention. With an exceptional camera, and emotionally-driven AI features, it’s like having a portable portrait lens in your pocket.

HONOR 400

Add to that a sleek design, reliable performance from the Snapdragon 7 Gen 3, a 5200mAh battery that goes the distance, and HONOR’s fast 66W charging, and you’ve got a midrange phone that does more than it should, for less than you’d expect.

HONOR 400

That’s why we’re giving the HONOR 400 the GadgetMatch Seal of Approval. It’s more than just a solid, midrange smartphone we’ve always known. It’s also a smart, creative companion for everyday storytellers and sentimental souls.

The HONOR 400 retails for PhP 22,999. In the Philippines, you can get preorder freebies worth PhP 9,397 including a HONOR Choice Earbuds Clip, JBL Go 4, and JISULIFE Fan Pro1.

Reviews

5 games with the nubia Neo 5 GT 5G

Niche device, but is worth the price?

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nubia has gone with an interesting direction for their latest midrange gaming line.

While other brands continue to blur the line between what is a “gaming-centric” smartphone and a reliable all-around device, the brands’ nubia Neo 5 series has been made even more aggressively for gaming.

And in 2026 where smartphone prices are skyrocketing and consumers are looking for the best value proposition before spending, that doesn’t seem to be the brightest route to go.

nubia Neo 5 GT

The nubia Neo 5 GT is the series’ top-of-the-line variant, with up 512GB of storage and a Dimensity 7400 processor.

The biggest highlight of the new series is the built-in cooling fan and Vapor Chamber cooling system.

This eliminates the need for a physical cooler, which you usually get for free anyway but have to attach to a magnetic phone case and power with a USB-C wire.

I think taking away that hassle of a set-up allows users to concentrate on gaming itself, as what this device is chiefly intended for.

And the cooling system does what it is solely asked to quite well: keep the phone’s temperature a lot cooler.

Moreover, if you’re playing for hours, this comes in helpful for bypass charging (branded as “Charge Separation” by nubia) to keep the temperature low.

The same purpose can be leveraged for quick charging, as the device’s 6,120mAh battery supports 80W charging.

Now of course, I’ve exhausted the device for about a month, playing my usual go-to mobile titles. Here’s how the phone performed with each game.

Mobile Legends: Bang Bang

As expected, MLBB is one of those titles that ran on the device without any problems. I can play multiple rounds even without the cooling fan turned on, and with the performance mode set to Eco.

Dunk City Dynasty

My time with this device also allowed me to revisit the NBA and NBPA-licensed Dunk City Dynasty.

I spent a lot of time on this multiplayer 3-on-3 title. Performance went generally smooth, although I had some connectivity issues.

This was a letdown since I needed to compete in real-time with other players. Nevertheless, I was able to chalk up several wins with characters like Jordan Clarkson and DeMar DeRozan.

Call of Duty Mobile

CODM was perhaps the first real test for this device, and this is where the cooling fan and a balanced performance setting came in handy.

Panning went without hiccups, allowing you to focus on just shooting. The graphics look more refined, specially with the phone’s 6.8-inch display. And fitting enough, the device did stay relatively cooler (I played mostly indoors).

Battery drain, of course, was somewhere in the 12% to 15% range, and even higher when playing with mobile data. The network was somewhat stable during the sessions I played.

Wuthering Waves

I felt the nubia Neo 5 GT also excelled in distributing the resources for heavier mobile titles like Wuthering Waves. 

Especially during combat, I didn’t experience any stutters nor frame drops with the fast-paced battles, which involved slashing, flying, and sliding, among other mechanics.

Taps felt responsive as well. If anything, I enjoyed playing this title again on this handset.

For reference, here’s the graphics settings I went with:

Honkai Star Rail

Lastly, HoYoverse’s space fantasy RPG also worked wonders on the device. That’s with the high-performance mode (Rise) on and the cooler again aiding the experience.

Visual effects definitely looked crisp and smooth, at a high frame rate setting. At 439ppi, the nubia Neo 5 GT’s pixel density ranks among the highest in its class, for refreshed graphics.

The 512GB storage capacity is definitely a plus. Just downloading assets for the two RPG titles will cost you about 100GB of space already.

Look, OS

The nubia Neo 5 GT retains the familiar mecha-inspired finish, with a glossy back as if it has a glass cover. The lighting effects look a bit more toned down.

What’s good about the exterior design language is it took into consideration mobile gaming habits.

Even the tip of the USB-C charger was designed so that it doesn’t interfere when a user holds the phone in landscape mode.

The phone also has a completely flat back so you can just place it on a surface while playing or streaming.

The biggest adjustment is the placement of the volume buttons and power button on the right-hand side of the phone. That’s because of the cooling system’s exhausts.

And when I started using this phone, I did commit a lot of errors, tapping on the volume down button instead of the power button.

Going old school

New to the series are integrated playable wallpapers, which throw you back to the good old days of playing Snake and Tetris.

There’s also a 2048-inspired game but instead of numbers, you’re dealing with ball sports. The smaller balls (i.e. billiards, golf) combine to form larger ones (baseball, football) and you’ll have to make the most out of the space.

Admittedly, this took a lot of my time every day and even had some competitive runs with my partner as we tried to overtake each other’s high score.

Connectivity

As I’ve mentioned, on the downside, the device has had its unstable Wi-Fi and mobile data moments.

I experienced this especially with Dunk City Dynasty and the phone suffered amidst real-time head-to-head combat.

I do have a feeling my sessions just coincided with Holy Week, and networks may have been congested.

Still, it’s something to ponder, especially if you’re considering purchasing it for other purposes like in the case of TNVS or delivery riders.

Camera

Onto the camera system, the nubia Neo 5 GT’s main camera is a 50MP shooter. I mostly just had captures of myself, food, and the street view.

For a device of this caliber, the camera does feel intended for such everyday moments. Lighting is a most definitely a friend, and colors can be off sometimes.

There are no violent reactions overall, but I have seen better and more capable camera systems on similar-priced devices.

Here are some samples:

Anything else?

Outside of gaming, I have been able to utilize this device pretty much as how it is intended to be used.

I browsed social media, watched basketball highlights, spoke with people through messaging apps, used Gemini, checked the maps, and everything else in between.

I would say loading times are a little better compared with extremely cheap handsets. The audio quality, however, sounds flat and cheap for music and gaming.

You do get the nubia Buds GT with early purchase, although the sound quality is too bass-leaning and not much of the mids and highs.

Is this your GadgetMatch?

The nubia Neo 5 GT is a Swipe Left. The addition of a built-in cooler and some OS add-ons make it enticing at first.

But for its price, you can already get a topnotch Infinix NOTE series device, or even a numbered series mid-ranger from the likes of HONOR, Redmi, or realme.

It’s understandably a niche device, but the value proposition feels off without a definitive punch and “all-around” offering.

At a time where consumers need more from manufacturers to justify price hikes, nubia went zagging with a more gaming-centric tool that doesn’t punch above its weight.

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Convenient Smart Home

Giving up counter space for reverse osmosis: Living with Waterdrop M6H in NYC

A 7-stage filtration system

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Waterdrop M6H

Living in New York City means two things when it comes to the kitchen: constantly negotiating with counter space and having the best drinking water in the country.

That’s exactly where a countertop reverse osmosis system like the Waterdrop M6H finds its place. It fits into apartment life surprisingly well, though not without tradeoffs.

Peace of mind

New York City is known for having some of the best drinking water in the country, and for most people, straight-from-the-tap is perfectly safe and dare I say: tastes the best, too. 

But using a reverse osmosis system isn’t necessarily about fixing bad water. It can also take already good water and filtering it down to a much finer level.

The Waterdrop M6H uses a 7-stage filtration system, which goes beyond basic filtration to remove things like heavy metals, chlorine, PFAS, and microplastics, which you might not think about daily but are still present in trace amounts. It also has UV sterilization, adding another layer of protection by targeting bacteria that may not be caught in filtration alone.

That extra layer of filtration becomes especially helpful when you have guests or family visiting. My parents, for example, have more sensitive stomachs, so even small differences in water quality can matter.

One tradeoff with reverse osmosis is that it also removes naturally occurring minerals like calcium and magnesium. In practice, it shouldn’t be a major concern for most people. Food, not water, should be the primary source of these nutrients.

Built for apartment living

One of the biggest advantages of the Waterdrop M6H is how easy it is to set up. There’s no installation, no need to touch your plumbing, and if you’re renting: no back-and-forth with a landlord. 

It sits on my counter like any other appliance. It’s roughly the size of my super automatic coffee machine, which makes it feel familiar and non-invasive. And just like my coffee machine, I get access to great drinking water with just a few presses.

For apartment dwellers like me, that plug-and-play design is a huge win. I could be living in my current home for years, but will likely still need to move out at some point. That means I can take the M6H with me no matter where life takes me.

Compact is both good and bad

That small footprint is what makes it viable in a city kitchen, but it also introduces the biggest inconvenience. 

Because the unit is compact, the water tank isn’t huge, and neither is the wastewater capacity. The built-in 135oz water tank capacity is large enough to get you through a good portion of the day. 

In practice, that means you’ll be refilling clean water and emptying the waste tank regularly, sometimes more than two times a day depending on usage. 

It’s not difficult, but it’s definitely more hands-on than a built-in system that runs continuously in the background.

Eats up precious counter space

Beyond just physically occupying counter space, the machine changed how I use my kitchen. 

The spot it takes is often the same area I would use for prepping food, whether that’s chopping vegetables, rolling or kneading dough, and plating meals. It’s also the same spot I use for putting dirty dishes before they get washed.

So while it technically fits, it reduced my working surface in a noticeable way. In a New York kitchen, losing even a small section of prep space can have a huge impact on one’s daily routine.

Bottle compatibility can be hit or miss

Another noticeable drawback of its compact size is the height clearance under the spout. If you tend to use taller insulated bottles, especially the narrow ones, they won’t always fit comfortably underneath.

I have a combination of tall and short ones, and so that means having to tilt the taller ones or filling them in stages, which interrupts an otherwise convenient experience.

Well thought-out experience

Where the Waterdrop M6H really stands out is in how easy it is to use. The touchscreen is intuitive without feeling overdesigned, and the preset buttons for coffee and tea temperatures are more than welcome. Thanks to its instant heating, I’m never waiting around for hot water when I want a comforting cup of tea after a chilly day out.

One of my favorite features is the ability to customize how many ounces of water you want dispensed. You can set it, place your glass or bottle underneath — as long as it fits — and walk away while it fills because it stops on its own. It’s a small detail that makes drinking clean water convenient.

It’s just a bonus that I’m more conscious of the amount of water I’m drinking on a daily basis.

The detachable glass pitcher is another thoughtful touch. You can take it off and pour directly to your vessel of choice, store it in the fridge for cold water, or use it directly for cooking.

Better than a filter pitcher

If you’ve used a standard filter pitcher before, the difference is immediate. 

With something like a Brita, you’re constantly refilling and waiting for water to slowly drip through the filter before you can use it. The Waterdrop M6H produces purified water much faster and on demand.

Even though I have to refill the tank daily, it’s still far less frequent, and far less tedious, than topping off a pitcher multiple times a day. 

Cost-wise, it also evens out over time. Instead of repeatedly buying smaller filters, you’re replacing one larger filter less often, with a more advanced level of filtration to show for it.

Is the Waterdrop M6H your GadgetMatch?

Even in a city with excellent tap water, a reverse osmosis system like the Waterdrop M6H can be helpful. It makes the most sense if you’re renting but still want better-than-tap filtration without dealing with permanent changes. 

While not as inconvenient as a Brita pitcher, it still requires daily maintenance. It is not the best fit if you’re already tight on counter space, cook frequently and rely heavily on your prep area.

A permanently installed reverse osmosis system will always win when it comes to pure convenience, and Waterdrop has great options for that. It runs continuously, requires less day-to-day interaction that you just forget about it, and it doesn’t take up precious counter space. 

For my current setup, the Waterdrop M6H is a practical middle ground. It delivers many of the same benefits in a flexible, renter-friendly form.

The Waterdrop M6H retails for US$429 before tax. Maintenance is straightforward: the replacement filter costs $79.99 and lasts about 12 months or roughly 1,100 gallons of water.

It isn’t cheap, but you can think of it as a long-term investment in your health. Its benefits aren’t immediate or obvious day-to-day, but something you’ll likely appreciate over time and thank yourself for later.

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Gaming

Saros review: Returnal’s difficulty is back and better than ever

Although, it loses the memorable storywriting.

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In 2012, Housemarque worked on the Angry Birds Trilogy compilation, the quintessential experience of throwing things at a wall and seeing which one will break it. In 2021, the studio developed Returnal, once again a quintessential experience of frustratingly throwing things at a wall. Now, in 2026, the studio is back with Saros, an experience with more of the same but with more flair and the accessibility to more easily break down those walls.

Turn back time over and over again

Like Returnal, Saros is a roguelike shooter. Players start every run from almost-scratch, earning Lucenite along the way. Upon death or winning the run, Arjun Devraj, the playable character, returns to the starting hub and spends his earned Lucenite to unlock meaningful (and permanent!) upgrades for the next run.

Along the way, Devraj finds an armory of available weapons and powerups that subsist through a single run, adding enough variability to ensure that no two runs are completely the same. Coupled with tangible upgrades, Saros creates an ever-changing experience but ensures that you feel stronger with every consecutive run.

It’s also a visually stunning game with designs that border on Lovecraftian. Enemies are so well designed that it’s impossible not to stop and stare at how detailed the monsters are.

A smoother, hypnotic fight

Saros plays like butter. Normally, shooters played on a controller are too finicky for me, but Saros just works. The game features a good number of auto-aiming weapons that help you focus on dodging projectiles. Even the native aim assist on non-automatic weapons is useful enough for making shots.

There’s also Power Weapons, or high-damage attacks that use consumable Power. There are a handful, and all of them are powerful enough to help win a difficult battle.

Fighting, then, is simply fluid. It didn’t take long for me to breeze through runs without focusing on muscle control. This makes for an easier game overall. Whereas Returnal has players beating their heads against the wall for hours, Saros is more accessible. It wants you to win. It wants you to get stronger.

As mentioned, each permanent upgrade is palpable. Devraj does get stronger. You can feel it when you rush past the starting area in no time. There are caps, but each cap is unlocked when you first beat a boss.

That said, the game still offers a challenge. Often, bosses take a few runs to master. Sometimes, you’ll get bodied by a surprise barrage from behind.

Variability that eventually runs out

The key to making a great roguelike rests on how different every run is. Some even have game-breaking combinations with ultra-rare pickups that wreck all of the game’s challenges.

At the start (especially before everything is unlocked), Saros does feature enough variability that invites you to discover everything that the game has to offer.

However, it does become clear that this variability has a limit. Once I had everything unlocked, I was defaulting to only a few combinations: a smart rifle (with auto-aim) with powerups that improve health and Lucenite drops. Plus, since I already had rerolls unlocked, I could just reset every drop until I got what I wanted. Experimentation doesn’t seem like a major draw for players; instead, it’s more about discovering the combination that works for you and grinding until you find it in every run.

Additionally, the map doesn’t really change. Though there are miniscule changes, none of which alters the experience that much. Each room features different terrain, but they’re all essentially identical to one another: fight the horde that spawns in and collect the reward afterwards.

Despite being treated as a major change to the map, even the self-imposed eclipse mode (from which the game derives its title) doesn’t add much besides the corruption status effect. At first, there’s a sense of dread going into the eclipse, as the game says that enemies are more powerful and unpredictable, but it will eventually teach you that eclipses are just part of the level design. There is zero tradeoff.

Every run has a lingering sense of sameness to it. This should be appealing to some, especially since it helps make the game more accessible. However, this approach will naturally run into a wall, particularly after you spend 2.5 hours on a run only to die on the final boss.

What story?

Saros is an exercise in Lovecraftian worldbuilding. Like all stories of the same bent, the game’s plot focuses more on the insanity of its world, rather than its characters.

The game does not say much about the story besides the bare brushstrokes. Devraj is part of the Echelon IV expedition to the planet of Carcosa. While his main mission is to find the past expeditions, he has a secret motivation to find Nitya, a member of Echelon III and his lover.

Similar to The King in Yellow by Robert W. Chambers, the game features allusions to madness because of “the Yellow”. Both previous expeditions and members of his own team succumb to the madness. However, the game never gives players enough time with any of these characters, so when they reveal themselves as victims of the same religious insanity, it’s never treated with the gravitas it deserves. People die, but you’ll barely miss them.

The same, unfortunately, goes for Devraj himself. Despite the world descending into cosmic horror around him, he stoically continues his mission to find Nitya. He doesn’t seem too affected by death. And, as such, he doesn’t really have a lot of qualities to latch on to, as a player who should be invested in the development of their playable character.

It’s atypical for a first-party PlayStation game to prioritize world-building over character writing. Most of the platform’s titles have incredibly memorable characters, but Saros just doesn’t. That said, the world-building is phenomenal; I just don’t want to spend hours reading through journal entries to find out what’s wrong with this world.

Is Saros your GameMatch?

If you found Returnal too difficult, Saros is a lot more approachable. It didn’t take me long to reach the game’s latter parts. If anything, the difficulty is finding two hours to go on an extended run. With the substantial progression system, it feels meaningful to restart and go again. Fans of roguelikes will easily Swipe Right on this game.

However, if you’re looking for a meaningful story to sink your teeth into, the game heavily prefers environmental storytelling. Prepare to spend hours just poring over lore. Even then, you won’t really get a sense of which characters to root for. For that, it’s a Swipe Left.

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