Bannon spent four months in prison after defying a subpoena from the House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack.
(Image credit: Kayla Bartkowski)
Eight years ago, and before my time as Cameras Editor, TechRadar called the Lumix ZS200 / TZ200 "the most advanced travel zoom camera" and gave it a near-perfect 4.5 / 5 rating in its review — and that discontinued model now has a surprise successor, the Lumix TZ300.
Like the 2018 original, the Lumix ZS300 / TZ300 packs a stabilized 24-360mm f/3.3-6.4 lens and large 1-inch sensor, shooting 20MP stills and 4K video — a tempting cocktail of quality and versatility, all in a truly pocketable body.
Despite the years, there's very little between the two cameras; in fact, I can tell you the key differences in a single sentence: the 2026 model gains USB-C charging, but loses a built-in viewfinder. That’s it.
It’s great to see the once-popular travel zoom compact readily available again — I thoroughly enjoyed reviewing the older model long before my TechRadar days — and it's now compliant with common charger EU laws thanks to its USB-C port, and ready to compete for a spot on my best compact cameras round-up. However, in a way the 2026 version is a pricier downgrade.
Will Panasonic's decision to strip the Lumix TZ300 back, without seemingly compensating with new features, come back to bite it?
The fact is, compact camera shipments are on the up again, and right now the Lumix TZ300 still has little competition, so Panasonic might just cash in anyway — I don’t think it needs to improve is flagship travel zoom compact to maximize sales, just make it available again, which is what it's done.
Here's the rear of the camera. On the old version, there was an EVF nestled into the top left above the screen, but here, just plastic (Image credit: Future / Tim Coleman)Removing the viewfinder no doubt cuts costs down (not that those savings are passed onto the consumer), and could be a reflection on how people tend to rely on screens more in 2026. For me, it doesn’t feel like a dealbreaker — the EVF in the original model wasn’t the best in any case.
What bothers me more is that the new version offfers no compensation — there’s just more plastic in place of where the viewfinder once was — and it feels dated in other areas. For example, in the absence of a viewfinder, I would have loved for Panasonic to install a tilt mechanism for the 3-inch rear display for easier viewing from awkward angles, but we again have a fixed screen.
Nor do we get Panasonic's latest features seen in other recent cameras, such as its improved autofocus and Real Time LUTs color profiles.
So what are we to make of the Lumix ZS300? There is seemingly enough of a compact camera resurgence to merit Panasonic bringing the range back to life, but not enough competition or consumer desire (or both) for Panasonic to feel it was worth producing a truly new and improved model — the quality was already there eight years ago to satisfy today’s demands.
The bottom line is that I’m happy to see the popular Lumix travel zoom return — I just wish for a little more camera.
Panasonic Lumix ZS300 / TZ300 specsPanasonic Lumix ZS300 / TZ300 specs:Type:
Compact, travel zoom
Sensor:
1-inch CMOS
Displays:
3-inch fixed touchscreen with 1.84m dots, no viewfinder
Memory:
SD
Lens:
24-360mm equivalent, f/3.3-6.4 (15x optical zoom)
Battery:
Embedded rechargeable 1255mAh Enduro Lithium-Ion
Video:
4K 30p
Photo:
20MP
Dimensions:
4.4 x 2.6 x 1.8 inches / 111 x 66 x 46 mm
Weight:
0.75lbs / 337g with battery and SD memory card
(Image credit: Future / Tim Coleman)Panasonic Lumix ZS300 / TZ300: Price and availabilityThe Lumix ZS300 / TZ300 is expected to hit stores in May 2026 and cost $899 / £869 / AU$1,599. It comes in two varieties — the gray version that Panasonic sent to me for this review, and an all-black version.
That price pits the Lumix TZ300 against the likes of the Canon PowerShot V1, which is a vlogging camera with a bigger sensor, superb autofocus and modern video skills, but a narrower standard zoom range. Given how much new tech is in Canon’s compact, it feels like better value (and there's rumored to be a travel-zoom version on the way which could rain on the Lumix parade).
The same money could also get you a small beginner mirrorless camera with kit lens, such as the excellent Fujifilm X-M5. Overall, the Lumix TZ300 feels like okay value at best.
I’ll cover the core specs of the Lumix TZ300 in this review, but most of what you need to know about the camera’s design and performance has already been covered in our Lumix TZ200 review.
The Lumix TZ300 is still a tidily packaged camera that slips easily into a pocket, with a reassuring weightiness — it feels like a quality piece of kit.
There are rubberized front and thumb grips for a firm hold, and every control is nicely dampened but also responsive, as is the 3-inch touchscreen.
Future / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanThe lens folds neatly away when the camera is powered off, and extends smoothly as you move through the zoom range, either using the ring around the lens or the touchscreen — it’ll depend on which shooting mode you’re using.
It’s easy enough to set the camera to auto and let it take care of the settings based on the scene you're photographing, but there are also enough manual controls to satisfy discerning photographers, including manual exposure and auto ISO with the ability to set a minimum shutter speed (my go-to setup with my professional camera).
A pop-up flash is squeezed into the body, and is a handy feature for party portraits and creative low-light photography, especially since it’s possible to manually adjust its strength and swap between first and second curtain flash sync (the point at which the flash fires during exposure).
Future / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanI really appreciated how slick the touchscreen function felt, and the detailed 1.84m-dot display itself, but a pronounced bump serves to highlight how its fixed design could have easily been upgraded to tilt without increasing the camera’s footprint.
Although the original viewfinder wasn’t the best in terms of the viewing experience, it was positioned smartly at the top-left, and felt easy to bring to the eye. I did miss having the option in the new version of the camera.
As mentioned, with the viewfinder having been removed I would have liked to see a tilt-screen upgrade to further assist viewing in bright light and at awkward angles; as it is, there's just plastic where the viewfinder was on the previous model.
Here's the same scene across the zoom range, starting with 24mmFuture / Tim ColemanThen 50mmFuture / Tim ColemanAnd 85mmFuture / Tim ColemanThis is 135mmFuture / Tim ColemanAnd 240mm, effectively a 10x zoom settingFuture / Tim ColemanAnd here's the maximum 15x zoom reachFuture / Tim ColemanFor such a versatile and small camera, the image quality from the Lumix ZS300 / TZ300 is surprisingly good. Naturally, you lose a little sharpness at the telephoto end of the zoom, but it’s still decent enough.
What you also lose as you zoom in is light sensitivity. That’s because the maximum aperture is reduced from f/3.3 at the 24mm wide-angle end to f/6.4 at the 360mm telephoto setting.
Long-exposure photography isn't well served — the minimum possible lens aperture is f/8, and there's no practical way to utilize an ND filter besides physically holding one in place in front of the lens.
Still, the 1-inch sensor knocks the socks off the much smaller one in Panasonic's other recent travel zoom compact, the Lumix ZS99 / TZ99, a camera that majors on versatility and value, less so on quality. For me, this new Lumix, like its predecessor, strikes the right balance between quality and versatility.
Future / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanHere I tired to react quickly to this scene, but start up time isn't the quickest and the lens cover got stuck in my haste. Future / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanIn addition to Panasonic’s usual color profiles, there are filter effects including cross process and toy camera. These effects have been around for years, and in an age of Real Time LUTS profile and flat LOG profiles for video recording, they feel a little dated.
And, if it wasn’t already obvious, none of Panasonic’s current Real Time LUTs or LOG profiles are present, which also means no access to customizable LUTs as you get with the Lumix S9 mirrorless camera.
There’s nothing new under the hood, which means we’re getting an old processor, limited continuous shooting speeds, and dated autofocus performance compared to other cameras at this price point.
The autofocus system did feel dated to me. Yes, subject tracking and face / eye detection was a thing back in 2018 and we still have it here, but Panasonic’s recent mirrorless cameras have much more responsive autofocus performance.
Is having similarly good autofocus too much to ask for in a compact camera? Maybe, but look at Canon, which has bestowed excellent autofocus features on its PowerShot V1.
A selection of the 23 creative filtersFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanFuture / Tim ColemanThere is a particularly versatile macro focusing mode, mind you. Close focusing is so effective, in fact, that you can effectively be touching your subject with the end of the lens and it’ll still be in sharp focus.
Battery life is decent enough without standing out. The 1,025mAh unit can capture up to 360 shots on a full charge according to its CIPA rating, which felt about right based on my use.
And on-the-go USB-C charging, a boon for traveling, is a big upgrade in the new Lumix TZ300 over its predecessor, which doesn’t offer it.
Attributes
Notes
Rating
Price
Considering this is the same camera as the 2018 model, but without a viewfinder, it feels a little pricey
3/5
Design
A 15x optical zoom and intuitive control layout, but no viewfinder and a fixed screen limit usability
3.5/5
Performance
The versatility to image quality mix is spot on if you need a good zoom, however video specs are dated
3.5/5
Should I buy the Panasonic Lumix ZS300 / TZ300?Buy it if...You want a quality and versatile travel compact
A 15x zoom range, stabilized lens and large 1-inch sensor combine for decent quality 20MP stills across the zoom range. The Lumix TZ300 shines for those whose travel snaps often feature distant subjects.View Deal
You’d rather not use a phone
Using a dedicated camera for photography can be a gratifying and creative experience over relying in your smartphone.View Deal
Don't buy it if...You shoot a lot of video
Yes, the Lumix TZ300 shoots 4K video, but the specs are dated now, and you get more for your money from recent vlogging cameras such as the PowerShot V1.View Deal
You want the latest camera tech
If you didn’t already know it, the Lumix TZ300 is a refresh of an eight-year-old camera with no new features besides USB-C charging, meaning you’re getting the old processor, shooting speeds and autofocus performance.View Deal
Also consider Panasonic Lumix ZS99 / TZ99If it’s the zoom range that appeals, then Panasonic’s own Lumix ZS99 / TZ99 goes even further and is a low-cost alternative. It has a greater 30x zoom range and similar handling, but its sensor is smaller and image quality is no match for the TZ300. You could also check out the Lumix FZ80D / FZ82D, which is similar in performance to the cheap Lumix ZS99 / TZ99, but is a bulkier bridge camera.
Read our in-depth Panasonic Lumix ZS99 / TZ99 review
Canon PowerShot V1An altogether different kind of compact camera, the PowerShot V1 puts quality and performance first over zoom versatility. This has Canon’s latest autofocus system, better video recording specs and a larger sensor with faster lens. If you don’t need the zoom range of the Lumix TZ300, then this could be your best alternative. There are rumors that Canon could launch a travel zoom compact in the same mold of the PowerShot V1. If it did, with the latest tech and similar pricing, then it would better the Lumix TZ300 in virtually every metric.
Read my in-depth Canon PowerShot V1 review
How I tested the Panasonic Lumix ZS300 / TZ300Panasonic loaned me a Lumix TZ300 for two weeks to complete my review. I was fortunate to be traveling in China during this period, and was therefore able to use it for the scenarios it’s designed for, taking video and photos of ancient towns, portraits, wide vistas and more.
I shot the same photo sequences spanning the zoom range of the lens, shoot photos in raw and JPEG format, and video in 4K and 1080p with the various frame rates.
For a lot of the test I was in changeable weather conditions at high altitudes. I kept track of battery life, counting how many photos I could take on a full charge, plus how long it took to recharge the camera.
For those unfamiliar with 8849, this is a sub-brand of Unihertz, and it takes its name from the height of Mount Everest in metres. Well, other than plate tectonics is pushing the mountain up, and rocks and ice fall off, so at the time of writing, it is 8,848.86 metres to be correct.
Oddly, the Tank series on 8849 has styling and functionality similar to the Unihertz Tank series, so perhaps the Unihertz brand will go away at some point.
The target demographic of the Tank X is those who need a go-anywhere design that packs plenty of battery capacity, are probably travelling to remote locations where they will want a camping light and to capture high-quality images and video.
A flagship product from 8849, the Tank X was launched in February 2026 at an early bird price of $549.99, against an RRP of $1,049.99. At that higher price, it will face serious scrutiny, but even at launch pricing, it is one of the more expensive rugged smartphones available.
The justification for that cost is a combination of headline features that most competitors simply cannot match. These include a built-in 1080p DLP projector rated at 220 lumens with laser autofocus, a 64MP night vision camera with four dedicated infrared LEDs, and a 17,600mAh dual-cell battery paired with 120W fast charging.
The MediaTek Dimensity 8200, built on a 4nm process, is a genuine step up from the mid-range chips used in most rugged phones at this price. Combined with 16GB of RAM and 512GB of storage, the Tank X has the hardware to handle demanding tasks.
The downside to the kitchen-sink approach to feature selection seen here is that at 750g, this is one of the heaviest rugged phones around, and not something that anyone travelling on foot would choose to include in their backpacks.
That bulk is a deliberate engineering choice, since a smaller device wouldn’t be able to mount the dedicated FPC connections for the projector, flashlight, camping lamp, sensors, and antenna array. The absence of wireless charging is also intentional, with 8849 prioritising a field lantern over Qi coils.
Durability credentials include IP68 and IP69K waterproofing, along with MIL-STD-810H certification, which covers immersion, high-pressure water jets, shock, vibration, and temperature extremes. The device runs Android 15, which is current but not cutting-edge, and 8849 hasn’t mentioned if it will see an Android 16 upgrade.
The inclusion of features like a projector always takes this device into niche areas, since this isn’t a capability that everyone needs on their Smartphone. And because of that, I won’t be including it in our list of the best rugged phones. But that’s not to say it isn’t perfect for somebody.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)8849 Tank X: price and availabilityMany phone makers like to make the launch of a new phone something special, probably because in the first month or so, it's likely they will see the largest number of sales.
The aggressive pitch of the 8849 Tank X is an early bird price from the makers of $549.99 (£460.46), which is almost half the $1,049.99 RRP. Call me cynical, but I feel it is unlikely the makers will sell any at the RRP, but the early bird price is attractive considering the specification of the Tank X.
The Amazon.com price is $629.99 with a coupon if you want next-day delivery.
To put that in perspective, the last phone I reviewed with a projector was the Ulefone Armor 34 Pro, a phone that cost $550/£519 when launched. It offered a bigger 25500 battery, a 150-lumen projector, and the current official price is $699.
However, Unihertz has the competitively priced Tank 2 Pro that can be bought for $479.99 direct from the maker, but only $412.59 on Amazon.com. And what makes that doubly interesting is that Unihertz is behind the 8849 sub-brand, so it's competing with itself with these products.
The Tank 2 Pro has more battery capacity, only 12GB of RAM, an older Helio G99 SoC, and is only 4G. But if it’s the projector that you want, this is the cheaper way to get that functionality.
There aren’t many phones with projectors, and the one in this design is higher quality than most, so the asking price seems realistic.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)Item
Spec
MediaTek Dimensity 8200, Octa-core (4nm)
GPU:
Mali-G610 MC6
NPU:
MediaTek NPU 580
RAM:
16GB
Storage:
512GB
Screen:
6.78-inch FHD+ LCD, 120Hz adaptive refresh, 750 nits peak
Resolution:
1080 x 2460 pixels
SIM:
2x Nano SIM + TF (one shared position)
Weight:
750 grams
Dimensions:
180.5 x 91.8 x 31.9mm
Rugged Spec:
IP68, IP69K, MIL-STD-810H
Rear cameras:
50MP Primary Camera + 64MP Nightvision + 8MP telephoto
Front camera:
Networking:
5G bands, WiFi 6, Bluetooth 5.3
Projector:
DLP, 1920 x 1080, 220 lumens, laser autofocus, throw 0.5m to 3m (1.6 to 10ft)
Torch/Lamp:
1,200 lumens; emergency warning lights
OS:
Android 15
Battery:
17600 mAh (120W wired, 5W reverse charge)
Colours:
Black
Oukitel WP61 Plus: design
The Tank X is a substantial piece of hardware. At 31.9mm thick, it is approaching the depth of a small portable battery pack, and at 750 grams, it is heavier than many 13-inch laptops. Carrying it in a trouser pocket is impractical; a jacket chest pocket or belt holster is the more realistic option for field use. Personally, I think it's best mounted on a vehicle.
The chassis uses a half-board, double-sided internal layout to house its unusual combination of components. The projector occupies the upper rear section of the body, with a dedicated lens housing visible on the back panel. The 1,200-lumen camping light and emergency warning lights are also rear-mounted, along with the triple camera array.
Where the Tank X goes slightly off the well-worn path, it’s the button layout, which is odd for those who have used many Android phones. The right side has only the power button that doubles as a fingerprint reader, a choice that’s not ideal for left-handed people.
On the left are two tiny volume buttons, and why they’re so small, I’ve no idea, and then two customisable push-to-talk buttons. The SIM tray isn’t on either side; instead, it gets relegated to the top edge alongside the projector and an infrared emitter.
Why this phone ended up with such a non-standard button layout seems inexplicable, given how big it is and the large amounts of unused space on the sides.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)Build quality is reinforced throughout with corner protection and a textured rear panel. IP68 and IP69K ratings mean the device tolerates water immersion to the 1,8M depth for up to 30 minutes and high-pressure wash conditions. MIL-STD-810H certification covers a broad set of environmental tests, making the Tank X suitable for deployment in demanding field environments ranging from construction sites to remote expeditions.
Although, and this is something I’ve not seen before, owners are not recommended to operate the buttons underwater. And, you are warned that “In daily use, exposure to seawater, swimming pool water, soapy water, hot water, or other liquids may reduce protective performance”.
The absence of wireless charging is worth noting for buyers accustomed to Qi pads. It is an intentional trade-off: 8849 replaced the Qi coil with the field lantern hardware, reasoning that users in the environments this device targets are more likely to have a USB-C cable than a charging mat.
The USB port is 2.0 spec, which means that getting files off the Tank X is substantially quicker over Wi-Fi than with a cable.
One aspect of the design I admired more was that the 6.78-inch LCD Punch-Hole Display is both bright, at up to 750 nits, and the colours are well saturated. This panel also has a small border to the physical front edge of the phone, which makes it seem even bigger than it is.
As a design, the priority for those making the Tank X was to stuff all the technology inside and protect it from the environment, which they achieved. However, there is almost nothing about this phone that is elegant or refined; it's more like a brick that’s had its sharpest edges filed down.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)Design score: 3.5/5
8849 Tank X: hardwareThe last phone I reviewed that used the MediaTek MT6896 (Dimensity 8200) was the Oukitel WP210 (read it here), and then I remarked that this SoC is a solid choice for those seeking a capable and efficient SoC in the mid-range smartphone market.
Built around an octa-core CPU, combining high-performance Cortex-A78 cores with energy-efficient Cortex-A55 cores, and a Mali-G610 MP6 GPU for enhanced graphics capabilities.
What’s great about this SoC is that it's extremely well-balanced in terms of processing power and graphics capabilities, and it supports high-end camera sensors and 5G comms.
There are more powerful chips available, like some of the Samsung options, and the latest Qualcomm Snapdragon designs, but you don’t typically see them in rugged phones.
In this context, the Dimensity 8200 has 16GB of LPDDR5 memory to work with, and 512GB of UFS 3.1 storage, along with up to 2TB on an optional TF card. That’s plenty of RAM and space for most use cases.
Before we get to the headline feature, it’s worth talking about the battery in this phone, and how it seems slightly smaller than I’d have expected. While 17600 mAh isn’t a small battery, a phone that weighs 750g or more, like the Ulefone Armour 33 Pro, for example, would normally have 20000 mAh or more battery capacity.
In fact, the Ulefone Armor 33 Pro has 25500 mAh, or 7,900 mAh more than the Tank X. And that phone isn’t special, the Blackview Oscal Tank 1 has 20000 mAh of capacity, but is only 640g.
But as we’ll discover in the performance section, thanks to the power efficiency of the Dimensity 8200, the Tank X can make its reduced capacity go as far as, or farther than, phones with larger batteries.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)Clearly, the culprit in making this phone 750g and reducing the space for extra battery capacity is the built-in projector.
The DLP projector is the defining feature of the Tank X and the one most likely to determine whether this device is relevant to any individual buyer. It can output at 1920 x 1080 with a claimed brightness of 220 lumens and uses laser autofocus for rapid alignment.
The throw range is approximately 0.5 to 3 metres (1.6 to 10 feet), allowing image sizes from small desk-surface projections to something approaching a practical portable screen.
I’ve seen other phone makers put projectors in their devices and claim all sorts of things, but this is the first one I’ve seen that could practically deliver most of what was claimed.
I should say that a home or office use projector might be rated at three times as bright, but then that’s physically much larger and requires mains power. But it should not be compared to a standalone projector with an equivalent lumen rating; the lens size and thermal constraints of a phone-integrated DLP mean the effective perceived brightness will be lower than that of a dedicated unit.
For a phone, however, it is the most capable projection system currently available in a handheld device, beating the 720p, 100-lumen units found in earlier 8849 and competing products. The 220 lumens offered here is genuinely usable in a darkened tent or unlit room, something I found quite shocking.
The one-touch projection feature allows rapid deployment without navigating menus, which is important for professional presentations and field briefings. 8849 claims the projector operates without excessive battery drain, but that’s something I’ll talk about in the performance section.
The 8849 Tank X has four cameras:
Rear camera: 50 MP Sony IMX766, 64MP Omnivision OV64B1B Sensor (Night Vision), 8 MP HiSilicon HI847 Telephoto with 3x optical zoom and AF
Front camera: 50MP Hi5022Q Fixed Focus
The camera layout of the Tank X is unusual, and probably a little bit ground-breaking.
Although it doesn’t have a Samsung 108MP sensor, this is easily one of the most capable camera setups I’ve found on any rugged phone tested to date. The primary rear sensor is a 50MP Sony IMX766, the same component used in several mainstream flagship handsets from the past two years. It is a strong choice for a device targeting serious outdoor photography and documentation work.
But ironically, it isn’t the sensor with the most elements. That’s the 64MP Omnivision OV64B1B, a night vision camera that is supported by four infrared LEDs and, crucially, retains autofocus capability in IR mode.
Fixed-focus night vision cameras, which are common on competing rugged phones, struggle with anything but stationary subjects at predictable distances. The Tank X's AF capability in infrared mode is a meaningful operational advantage for field surveillance, wildlife observation, and low-light navigation.
And rounding out what is already an impressive rear camera cluster is an 8MP telephoto lens with 3x optical zoom and autofocus. The dual-LED flash system uses two colour-temperature LEDs at 1.5A maximum output, supplementing the IR LEDs for mixed-lighting situations. The front camera is a 50MP sensor, which is exceptionally high resolution for video calls and documentation selfies.
When I first ran the camera app, I was disappointed that it presented me with 1X and 3.4X options, but you can easily slide all the way from 1X to 20X, although it gets rather grainy over 10X. Being able to frame images without having to move is great, and the results, especially from the Sony IMX766 and Omnivision OV64B1B, are generally excellent.
If there is a weakness here, it's how bare the screen is for special modes.
It offers you Timelapse, QR-code, Mono, Super resolution and an editing mode. There is a PRO control set, but what happened to sports mode, or Panoramic?
Thankfully, there is no dumb AI mode where it puts hats or animal features on people, but a more fleshed-out photo application would be ideal.
One of the best things about this phone is the restraint of the Android 15 installation, as it leaves the AI to Gemini, and avoids all the cash-grab chatbots that other brands (Blackview, looking at you) have smeared onto their devices.
Overall, it could have more features in the photo app, but the camera offering here is exceptionally strong for a rugged phone.
(Image credit: Mark Pickavance)8849 Tank X Camera samplesMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavanceMark PickavancePhone
8849 Tank X
Blackview Oscal Tank 1
SoC
MediaTek Dimensity 8200
MediaTek Dimensity 7050
GPU
Mali-G610 MC6
Mali‑G68 MC4
NPU
MediaTek NPU 580
MediaTek NPU 550
Memory
16GB/512GB
12GB/256GB
Weight
750g
640g
Battery
17600
20000
Geekbench
Single
1260
920
Multi
3939
2466
OpenCL
4056
2471
Vulkan
4517
3036
PCMark
3.0 Score
15637
11684
Battery
32h 48m
33h 57m
Charge 30
%
11
13
Passmark
Score
17045
6861
CPU
8623
5285
3DMark
Slingshot OGL
Maxed Out
5293
Slingshot Ex. OGL
Maxed Out
4150
Slingshot Ex. Vulkan
Maxed Out
3940
Wildlife
6343
2232
Nomad Lite
632
266
If it wasn’t for the projector, this phone would probably weigh around 650g, and have at least 20000 mAh of battery, so I thought it best to compare it with one that has almost exactly that spec. I should also mention that the typical price of the Blackview Oscal Tank 1 is only $285, although it doesn’t have a projector and has less memory and storage.
What these numbers are a good representation of is how much better the newer MediaTek 4nm SoCs are over their older 6nm models.
This gives the Tank X more processing power, more GPU performance, and it's singularly more power efficient. In fact, the CPU-GPU combination is so potent that it maxed out most 3DMark tests, except for Wildlife and Steel Nomad Lite.
One note about the battery consumption is that while it didn’t last as long by roughly an hour, the Tank X has roughly 88% of the capacity, and the test stopped with 20% of the battery capacity left. Had it used that final fifth of the battery, it would have exceeded Tank 1 by at least three to four hours, I estimate.
If given the choice between these two phones, it comes down to how much eight is too much and whether your budget goes far enough to have the superior features of the Tank X.
I almost forgot to mention the projector, which has both good and bad aspects. The bad first is that the fan needed to keep it cool is loud, and you will need to turn up the volume to be able to hear whatever content you are watching. I estimated that it was in the 55-60 dB range, which isn’t something easily ignored.
To see the impact on battery performance, I ran a YouTube video for 30 minutes and recorded the battery consumption before and after. Projecting 30 minutes of video used up 11% of the available battery, suggesting you might get through the first Lord of the Rings movie, The Fellowship of the Ring, but I suspect not the extended edition.
Therefore, you can watch a whole movie with a fully charged battery, as long as you choose the right one.
Putting all the good things that 8849 put into the Tank X to one side for a moment, the elephant in this room is disguised as a phone or the monolith from 2001: A Space Odyssey, depending on taste.
This isn’t a phone anyone would carry casually, unless they’re related to the late Andre the Giant.
That said, if you can put up with something as big and heavy that it could be mistaken for a useful part of house construction, then there is plenty to like here.
The screen on the Tank X is bright and large, with an excellent colour gamut. The camera cluster goes way beyond what most rugged phones offer, and you can take exceptional photos and video with it. This device also has the first truly practical 1080p projector I’ve seen on a phone, and that’s an exclusive feature.
As for price, the early-bird pricing is good, but I couldn’t see many of these being sold at a price greater than $1000 RRP.
It’s time to create a feature matrix and see how many boxes it ticks, because the Tank X might not be for everyone, but it could be for you.
Should I buy a 8849 Tank X?8849 Tank X Score CardAttributes
Notes
Rating
Value
Reasonable cost for an exceptional feature set on early-bird price
4/5
Design
Heavy and thick, with an odd button layout
3.5/5
Hardware
Modern 4nm SoC, plenty of RAM and storage, and a projector
4/5
Camera
Best camera cluster in a rugged phone
4/5
Performance
Powerful, yet power efficient, though the projector is noisy
4/5
Overall
Good price, excellent feature set, but is it practical?
4/5
Buy it if...You need a phone for outdoors
The water and dust resistance on the TANK X make it robust enough for extreme weather conditions and even being immersed. But it is exceptionally heavy and unsuitable for small hands.
You need extended battery life
Few smartphones can match a 17,600 mAh battery and power-efficient SoC for sheer staying power. However, avoid using the projector for long periods if you want to keep using it.
You need a daily driver
The large frame is not practical for everyday pocket carry. If you need a rugged phone for general daily use rather than field deployment, a more compact option would serve better.
You are working with a budget
Unless you must have a phone with a projector, there are cheap options with equally powerful platforms for less. View Deal
Ulefone Armour Mini 20 Pro
A practical, 5G rugged design with an inbuilt camping light, night vision camera, but with less battery than the Tank X, and fewer features. This makes the phone easily pocketable and usable like a normal phone.
Read our full Ulefone Armor Mini 20 Pro review
Blackview Xplore 2 Satellite
Offers satellite communications via Skylo, the more powerful Dimensity 8300 SoC, and a 20,000mAh battery with 120W fast charging. Lacks the projector or the cameras of the Tank X, but it's better in other respects.
Read our full Blackview Xplore 2 Satellite review View Deal
For more ruggedized devices, we've reviewed the best rugged tablets, the best rugged laptops, and the best rugged hard drives
Trump threatened to bomb Iran's power plants and bridges unless it opens the Strait of Hormuz. And, NASA's Artemis II crew prepares to make its closest approach to the moon.
(Image credit: Pool)