Sony has an Android problem. For years now the consumer electronics giant has been making some truly head-turning hardware loaded with Google’s mobile OS. When it comes to actually using the hardware, though, things almost always go south. It seems Sony just can’t help itself from making the same mistakes over and over.
The Xperia Z3 is its latest almost-great phone. On paper, the it looks like a gem. You’ve got a 5.2-inch 1080p display (424 ppi), a 20.7-megapixel camera capable of shooting 4K video, Qualcomm’s super-quick 2.5GHz quad-core Snapdragon 801 processor, not two but three gigabytes of RAM, a 3100mAh battery, dual front-facing speakers, and sure, what the hell, let’s make it waterproof to a depth of 5 feet for up to half an hour, too. There aren’t many phones out there with a rap sheet as bad as that.
With the screen off, it looks like a polished black slab—both front and back. Around the sides is a solid, gently rounded aluminum chassis. Up top is a headphone jack (yes, it’s waterproof). On the right-hand side, you’ll find the door covering the micro SD card slot, the silver power button, the volume rocker, and lastly, the physical shutter button for the camera. (All phones should have a physical shutter button.)
When it comes to speed, you won’t have any complaints. Sony went through a long phase where it used great processors, but bad software slowed everything down. That seems to be one thing they’ve solved because this thing absolutely screams. I don’t see any hesitation while flipping between home screens, app and folders fly open, and everything seems to move as fast as your finger.
As for sights and sounds, the screen is very bright and I almost never had any difficulty reading it outdoors. The colors are rich, too. The Z3 doesn’t have those super inky blacks that we love on AMOLED displays, though, and at times it looks a bit gray and flat.
I was excited about the dual front-facing speakers (a la the HTC One M8), but while they’re fairly loud and nice for gaming, they’re not very clear. Music sounds distorted and unbalanced, and things can be grating at full volume. In contrast, both the HTC One M8 and the new Moto X (which only has one true front-facing speaker) are louder and better sounding.

