The LG G2 is the supercomputer of smartphones – at least for the time being. It's the first phone in the U.S. to sport a Snapdragon 800 system-on-a-chip with a quad-core 2.26GHz CPU. It has two gigs of RAM. It has the 4G LTE and the NFC. It may be faster than your computer. All the phones and the processors and the miniaturization and the convergence and the cellular technology in history has been leading up to this phone. Too bad LG's proprietary whistles and bells keep the G2 from being a truly amazing phone.
How much faster could this phone be when launching apps, rendering web pages, and playing games? The answer is none. None more fast. Apps load with no perceivable delay, games act like they're running on a $500 console, and navigation elements respond immediately to your touch as if they were physical objects. It's a damn miracle of science.
The G2's 5.2-inch, 1920 x 1080 display is like a high-end HDTV. At 423 pixels per inch (ppi), the 16:9 IPS display is tack-sharp. The screen and its slim bezel also add up to the perfect size – for my hands, at least. It's big enough to make a positive difference when watching videos, browsing the web, viewing photos, typing, and multitasking, but it's not obnoxiously big. It feels like a phone and not a "phablet," whatever that means. I used it without a case and was surprised at how light and low-key it felt in my pocket. It felt less bulky than an iPhone 4S in a Mophie case.
That screen also comes with the slipperiest coating imaginable, which kicks the smoothness of your scrolling and swiping into high gear. It also presents a trait that I've never encountered in a phone: The coating is slippery enough to make the phone slide off a table, seemingly under its own power, if the table is even the slightest bit crooked (see video below). The phone is capable of slithering around by itself. You can use it as an air-hockey puck on any flat surface.


