Boost Mobile Celero 5G review

The Celero 5G is the first smartphone launched by the Dish-owned Boost Mobile. Launched in September of this year, the Celero 5G is their way of bringing a lost-cost 5G capable device to the prepaid carrier.

This device typically financing $279.99 but is commonly discounted. At the time of writing, it is going for $139.99 and comes with a self-ruling case.

As a budget-friendly device, the Celero 5G needs to imbricate most of the bases to have a solid offering. Is the Celero 5G unbearable to get Boost Mobile customers to dip their toe in the 5G water, or does it land without a splash? Let’s find out.

Display

The front of the Celero 5G is scrutinizingly all screen. Housing a V-notched 6.5-inch HD exhibit puts this device on the larger side. Weighing in at 7.16 ounces (203 grams) this device is fairly light. The top of the exhibit dips slightly and curves under the front-facing camera, creating the V-notch.

The exhibit offers a 720 x 1600 resolution. Although the resolution isn’t 1080p, the exhibit performed well during my testing. The 60Hz exhibit was worldly-wise to alimony up with everything I did on the device.

As a side note, if you are coming from a higher refresh rate screen, it could be a little jarring going when to a 60Hz display. I could see a bit of lag when scrolling virtually on the home screen, but there was no perceivable lag when doing anything else.

The exhibit was bright, vivid, and enjoyable to use. Unfortunately, the device does have a slight bezel on top and a large chin. You mostly forget they are there when using it, as I found browsing the web and playing games to be an enjoyable experience.

Design

The top and left sides of the device are mostly an all-metal experience. The only unravel in the diamond comes from the sim vellum slot on the left side and a microphone slum on top. The sim vellum slot does double duty here, as it moreover houses the expandable microSD card.

The right side of the device houses the volume rocker and the fingerprint-enabled power button. The marrow of the Celero 5G is where you will find the speaker grille, a USB-C port, a microphone hole, and the headphone jack.

The when has a nice metallic finish and houses the triple rear camera. I found the when of the device to be one of its nicest features when it comes to its design. In a world where many phones squint the same, it was nice to see the metallic when with a chrome vocalizing on the camera housing.

Performance and Specs

I was pleasantly surprised by the performance of this upkeep device. With a MediaTek MTK5G-C, (basically a Dimensity 700 chip) and 4GB of ram, I experienced scrutinizingly no slowdowns.

Browsing the web and doing unstipulated everyday tasks, caused me no issues. In fact, day-to-day operation was quite enjoyable.

Gaming

To push this handset and test its true capabilities I downloaded both Grid Autosport and Call of Duty Mobile. Considering the price and the CPU, both games ran well. Grid Autosport looked unconfined and never slowed down. Plane with enhanced graphics enabled, it just kept chugging along. My wits was quite similar to my Samsung Galaxy S21.

Call of Duty Mobile was moreover a pleasurable experience. I downloaded the upper graphics pack and went to town. The game ran in low graphics mode, but it still looked great. I did wits one instance of slow down, but it didn’t really impact my game.

Just alimony in mind that this is a upkeep chip. It will not alimony up with any of the increasingly premium offerings from Snapdragon or plane a largest MediaTek Dimensity tweedle like the recently spoken Dimensity 9000.

Sound

The sound on the device was adequate. It wasn’t unchangingly the clearest, but it was definitely loud enough. A complaint that I do have is how easy it was to imbricate the single speaker. When holding the device in landscape, I would unwittingly imbricate the speaker grille. Unfortunately, when that happens, the sound comes out completely muffled. It is easy unbearable to move your finger, but it is a little jarring when it happens.

Additional Specs

The Celero 5G moreover has 64GB of storage and that you can expand using a microSD card. It supports microSD cards up to 2TB.

The fingerprint reader worked ratherish but wasn’t unchangingly the most accurate. Often, I had to reposition my finger to get it to work correctly. On increasingly than one occasion, I couldn’t plane use the fingerprint reader considering I would unwittingly touch it with flipside part of my hand and it would lock out the fingerprint reader. It was worrying when it happened as this hasn’t happened to me on any other device.

Battery

The 4000mAh shower can hands last a day. For unstipulated use, you will not have to squint for a charger to make it through the day. Gaming does tend to be a bit harder on the battery, so if you do a lot of gaming, be prepared to tuition it increasingly often. But that is true of all mobile devices.

The shower is charged with a 15W charger that comes in the box, helping to tuition it quickly. You won’t find wireless charging here, so you are limited to wired charging.

Camera

The Celero 5G houses a triple camera setup. With a 16MP standard lens, a 5MP ultra-wide lens, and a 2MP depth camera. The 2MP depth camera is used to squire with focusing.

The results were a bit of a mixed bag. When lighting was adequate, you could get some good-looking shots with the main camera. The colors looked well-judged and you could get very tropical for some nice macro shots. Plane with unobjectionable lighting, the ultra-wide camera produced some visionless images. When you squint at the images of the car, you can see the lighting differences between the standard lens to the ultra-wide lens.

Things got slightly worse when the lighting dims down. Shots struggle with dynamic range, so unrepealable parts of the picture are too bright, while other parts are overly dark. You can see the picture of the Christmas Tree where the marrow looks squandered out, but the top is relatively dark.

The bokeh effect moreover produced some mixed results. Sometimes it worked out pretty well, like with the Christmas Tree, but other times it incorrectly voiceless the image. The picture of the car has some incorrect blurring withal the when of the hood and there is blurring withal the top-left whet of the lamp post.

The front-facing camera is serviceable. It produces some soft-looking images but is good unbearable for social media. The images from the front-facing camera are often unexceptionable enough, plane when lighting isn’t as abundant.

While the camera system on this device is serviceable and can produce some nice shots, it’s too inconsistent for my liking. If you rely on your camera and love taking photos, this may not be the device for you.

Software

The Celero 5G runs a mostly stock version of Android 11. That keeps the device wipe and operating smoothly.

Unfortunately, there is quite a bit of bloat on this device. There are both carrier-specific apps, as well as randomly installed applications. To make it plane worse, the Celero 5G asked me if I wanted to install spare software when setting up.

The Boost Mobile apps consisted of Boost Perks, My Boost, Secure Wi-Fi, and voicemail. Based on my count, I had to deal with 19 unwanted apps upon first booting the device. Luckily, it’s only a minor pain as you can uninstall them. It’s not something I enjoy doing when I first get my device.

The unwanted apps may be a necessary evil to alimony the forfeit lanugo and provide the value to price ratio that Dish and Boost Mobile were targeting.

Final Verdict

Overall this device was quite a pleasant experience. It was fast unbearable to deal with scrutinizingly everything I threw at it.

I was quite pleased to see the Celero 5G play games as well as it did. Call of Duty Mobile and Grid Autosport are not exactly easy games to run. But the fact that this device was worldly-wise to run them and do it at the level that it did, left me quite impressed.

In wing to gaming, unstipulated content consumption is moreover good on this device. The larger screen allows for largest a media-consuming experience. You may want to use headphones though, but at least you can use wired headphones if that is something you enjoy.

Battery life was unconfined and I really like that the device offers a microSD vellum to expand the seated memory.

As long as you temper expectations of the camera system, this device is well worth the price tag, expressly when you can find it discounted.