The Lava Agni 3 has a triple-camera setup at the back, with a 50-megapixel primary camera, and two additional 8-megapixel sensors for telephoto and ultra-wide capabilities. At the front is a single 16-megapixel shooter. The telephoto camera at the back can do 3X optical zoom, while the main 50-megapixel camera gets optical image stabilisation.
The rear camera system is alright as far as typical cameras in this price range go, getting standard photography right much of the time. I didn’t have any trouble with sharpness and framing in good light, although the colours were sometimes awkward if I didn’t take the effort to frame the shot properly and adjust the brightness metering optimally. It’s not quite as point-as-shoot as you want, but you can get decent images with a bit of effort.
Of course, a big advantage of the rear screen is the ability to capture selfies with the rear camera with ease, and that puts the Lava Agni 3 a few steps ahead of competing devices when it comes to this feature. Having the screen as a viewfinder is helpful when framing selfies, and even lets you use the portrait mode easily. Indeed, it is the best use case of the rear screen, and adds some value to the camera setup.
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Portrait photography was way below par, barely getting depth perception and subject focus right with objects such as flowers and plants. Low-light photography was grainy and often out of focus and hazy in parts of the image. On the whole, this isn’t the best camera phone you can buy for the price (that’s not really the USP of the phone either) but it’ll work for the absolute basics and let you take proper selfies with the more capable rear camera system.
Performance is generally acceptable for a smartphone in this price segment, with the Lava Agni 3 getting a decent amount of power and usability from the MediaTek Dimensity 7300X chipset. The light, near-stock Android UI also helps in this regard, not requiring much to keep going. Don’t expect too much, but in general the phone has enough to keep itself going smoothly for the most part, save for a bit of sluggishness when booting up.
Battery life on the Lava Agni 3 is decent enough, especially when you consider that it has two screens to power. Of course, the smaller rear screen doesn’t need a lot of power and won’t even be put to use for more than a few minutes every day, and the rest of the phone is made to be fairly efficient. I was able to run the phone for a couple of days with moderate use as my second smartphone, and even heavier utilisation won’t cause too much to reduce from that figure.