If you already have an iPhone, a Galaxy Nexus or some other head-of-the-class smartphone in your pocket, the Huawei Mercury isn't the phone for you. But if you're upgrading from a feature phone, or if you're loathe to sign a two-year contract and would prefer a pay-as-you-go plan, it's likely the perfect phone for you.
Huawei's handset – available on Cricket's smartphone plans, which start at $55 per month with no contract – is a mid-level Android device that makes a great first smartphone, and it performs solidly enough even though it lacks the specs and polish of the latest top-tier hardware.
The Mercury (also known as the Huawei Honor and Huawei Glory elsewhere) is a little bit wider and slightly thicker than the average Android. The build is mostly plastic and the quality of the case is kind of cheap-feeling. The touchscreen is nice, though – a 4-inch Gorilla Glass panel that's durable and scratch-resistant. The display is also bright and relatively clear, with a FWVGA 854×480 pixel resolution screen that can display 16 million colors.
I didn't expect the Mercury to equal the performance of fancier, more expensive phones, so I was surprised by how well it handled under load.Battery life is better than expected, thanks to a 1900 mAh battery that allows 380 standby hours and up to 8 hours of talk time. In my tests, it survived a full day between one charge and another. The back of the phone pops off, so you can easily replace the battery. This is where you put the SD card in as well.
The processor and memory – single-core 1400 MHz Qualcomm Snapdragon S2 with 512MB of SDRAM – supply more than enough brawn for the average user. Actually, I didn't expect the Mercury to equal the performance of fancier, more expensive phones, so I was surprised by how well it handled under load. I was multitasking, running a handful of apps in the background while browsing the web with no problem at all. Jumping from one app to another doesn't seem to slow down the phone, even while playing music in background.
