3 Minutes
Lava has confirmed the Agni 4 will debut in India on November 20 — and a fresh poster has lifted the veil on core specs. The handset will pack MediaTek's Dimensity 8350 chipset, flagship-class memory and storage, and a massive 7,000mAh battery, putting it squarely in the value flagship conversation.
Dimensity 8350, LPDDR5x and UFS 4.0 — flagship speed on paper
The new poster explicitly names the Dimensity 8350 as Agni 4's SoC and lists LPDDR5x RAM alongside UFS 4.0 storage. Those are typically reserved for premium phones: LPDDR5x boosts memory bandwidth and power efficiency, while UFS 4.0 accelerates app launch times, file transfers and system responsiveness. Together with the Dimensity 8350, Lava is clearly aiming for performance that punches above its price class.
Design cues: metal frame, two finishes and a mysterious extra button
Leaks and renders indicate an aluminium frame and two colorways — Lunar Mist and Phantom Black. The rear shows a horizontal dual-camera module, and there's an additional physical button on the right edge alongside the power and volume keys. Will that extra key be programmable for shortcuts or camera launch? Lava hasn’t confirmed, but it’s a handy feature for power users.
Display and software: smooth AMOLED, near-stock Android
According to reports, the Agni 4 will sport a 6.78-inch Full HD AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate, promising fluid scrolling and vivid colors. Lava says the phone will run a near-stock version of Android, though it's unclear whether it will ship with Android 15 or the newer Android 16 at launch — either way, a clean UI should help performance and battery life.
Big battery, big cameras — and an aggressive price point?
The standout spec is a 7,000mAh battery, one of the largest capacities seen in this segment. That kind of cell suggests multi-day endurance for moderate users and full-day heavy use without reaching for a charger. Camera hardware reportedly includes a dual 50-megapixel setup on the back — a configuration that could deliver excellent primary shots plus a versatile secondary lens, depending on sensor choice.
Initial pricing rumors peg the Agni 4 at roughly Rs 20,000 (about $225), which would make these flagship-like components feel like a steal if other features and real-world performance hold up. Lava’s official launch on November 20 should fill in remaining gaps such as exact RAM/storage options, software version, and full camera specs.
Imagine a phone that blends long battery life with near-flagship internals at an aggressively affordable price. If Lava pulls it off, the Agni 4 could be a major contender in India’s midrange market.
Source: gizmochina
Leave a Comment