LG had been teasing the “Velvet” for several weeks now, trickle-feeding information about the company’s new premium level smartphone. Today, the company officially launches the device in Korea, fully revealing the specifications of the device as well as its pricing.

The LG Velvet isn’t a “true flagship” as it positions itself just one tier below that, featuring a Snapdragon 765 SoC as well as a lesser camera configuration. Where it does stand out is in the design – whilst some might criticise as “standard”, it’s probably LG’s best-looking phone in years. All whilst maintaining a reasonable price tag of around 670 USD.

LG Velvet
  V60
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 765

1x Kryo 475 Prime (CA76)
@ 2.3GHz
1x Kryo 475 Gold (CA76)
@ 2.2GHz
6x Kryo 475 Silver (CA55)
@ 1.8GHz
GPU Adreno 620
DRAM 8 GB
Storage 128 GB UFS 2.1
+microSD
Display 6.8" FullVision AMOLED
2460 x 1080 (20.5:9)
Size Height 167.2 mm
Width 74.1 mm
Depth 7.9 mm
Weight 180 grams
Battery Capacity 4300 mAh (Typical)
Wireless Charging Qi
Rear Cameras
Main 48MP
f/1.8 w/OIS
Wide 8MP
Super-wide angle
Extra 5MP
Depth
Front Camera 16MP
I/O USB 2.0 Type-C
3.5mm headphone jack
Fingerprint reader
Wireless (local) Wi-Fi 6
Bluetooth 5.1
Cellular GSM, CDMA, HSPA, 4G/LTE, 5G
Splash, Water, Dust Resistance IP68
Dual-SIM nano-SIM
Launch OS Android 10
Launch Price ₩899,800 (~670 USD pre-tax)

Internally, the phone is powered by the Snapdragon 765 SoC, which is Qualcomm’s second-highest tier chip this year. Supporting two Cortex-A76 cores, one at 2.3GHz and one at 2.2GHz alongside 6 Cortex-A55 cores at 1.8GHz, it should perform adequately, although it’s still quite behind the flagship Snapdragon 865 phones out there.

LG configures the Velvet with 8GB of DRAM as well as 128GB of UFS 2.1 as base storage configurations, and there’s a microSD slot for expansions.

Dimension-wise, although it shares the same screen diagonal as the LG V60 at 6.8”, the Velvet is a quite smaller phone as the screen curves to the sides and has very narrow side-bezels, resulting in a 74.1mm body width – around the same form-factor as an S20+.

It’s an POLED display with 2460 x 1080 resolution in a 20.5:9 aspect ratio, LG here is lacking any special features such as high refresh rates.

As teased several weeks ago, it’s a quite differently looking LG device as it sports a new industrial design that leaves behind some of LG’s more “practical” approaches of previous generations. Yes it’s still very much a glass sandwich and certainly not anything revolutionary, but I still think it looks quite good in terms of its execution.

The Velvet maintains a reasonable weight and thickness at 180g and 7.9mm – still able to host a 4300mAh battery in its body.

The camera setup was the one big unanswered question in terms of specifications of the phone, but today’s announcement seems quite disappointing in this regard. The phone has a 48MP main camera alongside a measly 8MP ultra-wide-angle and a 5MP depth sensor module. This really is quite below the industry standard at this device level – I just hope that the 48MP module is a decent one as I don’t have much expectations of that UWA.

Other selling-points of the Velvet is the fact that it still features a 3.5mm headphone jack which nowadays is a rarity in new phones.

LG announced the Velvet only in Korea for now at a price of ₩899,800 which corresponds to $670 pre-taxes. It’s an attractive phone, but I feel like it will be a make-or-break matter in regards to its camera abilities. The fact that LG is only releasing the device in Korea at this moment in time suggest that they’re experimenting and waiting out to gauge the reactions before possibly considering a wider device launch. I certainly commend them on the new industrial design of the phone – the company’s certainly on the right path in that regard.

Related Reading:

Comments Locked

27 Comments

View All Comments

  • shabby - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Lol at that price, i paid $610 usd for a new s20 snapdragon straight from samsung when they had in on sale last month, not sure what lg is thinking with that price with a midrange soc.
  • Alistair - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    No you didn't, Samsung sold it for $799 on sale. But anyways, Samsung should be selling for $750 or less, and LG should be pricing this at $600 or less. Both bad buys. Low powered phones for high prices.
  • Alistair - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    Pretty sure LG and Samsung will announce record low sales this year, and it won't be because of Covid19.
  • shabby - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    In Canada there was a 20% discount and $200 junk phone trade in.
    So $1300 - 20% = 1040 - 200 = $840 cad, that's around $600 usd
  • close - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    Since when can you forget to include the trade-in in the price? What kind of comparison is that? You "paid" $750 USD on it. If you get it as a present will you say you could get one for free?
  • shabby - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    🤷🏼‍♂️🤷🏼‍♂️🤷🏼‍♂️
  • shabby - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    I traded in a useless broken flip phone.
  • Alistair - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    Yeah it's a weird thing Samsung does, basically admitting they charge too much in Canada in particular. $200 off for any old broken device.
  • shabby - Friday, May 8, 2020 - link

    Yup, either you get samsung Bud's in the first month for free or $200 off the second month with any trade in.
  • trivik12 - Thursday, May 7, 2020 - link

    its too expensive at this price point. Design is otherwise good. I hope LG updates camera module to use IMX700 and use Snapdragon 875 next time around.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now