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BOLD N4 Review

A "Midrange" That Doesn't Feel Like a Compromise

Every so often, a budget-friendly phone comes along that feels like it’s been designed to make you question how much money you actually need to spend for something fast, capable, and modern. The BOLD N4 5G is one of those rare devices.

At $299, it reads like a value play. But after spending time with it, I came away convinced that BOLD isn’t trying to compete with other budget phones. It’s trying to blur the line between midrange and flagship, and it gets closer than you’d expect. From its performance and dual-display design to its ridiculous 512GB of built-in storage, this is one of the most ambitious attempts yet at delivering top-tier specs in an affordable shell.

This review walks through what makes the BOLD N4 so surprisingly complete, and where its ambition occasionally outpaces its polish.

But first, a trip down memory lane and a refresher on the brand.

The BOLD N4 5G feels like a wake-up call for the budget market. It’s a $299 phone with half a terabyte of storage, flagship-level speed, and a clever dual-display design that makes everyday use smarter and more fun.

Who is BOLD?

BOLD is a sub-brand of BLU Products, created to push beyond the company’s value-focused roots and deliver a more premium smartphone experience without the premium price tag. Where BLU (“Bold Like Us”) built its reputation on affordability and accessibility, BOLD serves as its forward-leaning, design-driven arm, if not somewhat of an experimental platform for higher-end materials, flagship-tier specs, and longer software support.

BOLD N4 5G smartphone packaging featuring a colorful design and specifications, with a focus on 512GB storage, displayed against a blurred background of shelves.

BOLD is the brand BLU uses to explore what’s next, blending style, performance, and practicality for users who want an elevated experience that still feels attainable. In short, BOLD leans more into BLU’s revolution than its evolution.

BOLD’s story began in 2019 with the BOLD N1, a phone that immediately set itself apart from its parent company’s lineup. It introduced a sleeker design language and a focus on flagship-style polish at a price point that undercut the competition. With its pop-up selfie camera, AMOLED display, and in-display fingerprint sensor, features rarely seen below $300 at the time, the N1 served as a clear statement that BLU intended BOLD to be its more premium, design-forward experiment.

Fast-forward to 2022 and the arrival of the BOLD N2, a major leap in both aesthetics and performance. It traded the mechanical selfie camera for a hole-punch design, upgraded to a curved AMOLED panel, and delivered a more refined unibody look that rivaled far pricier devices. Under the hood, it adopted a more capable MediaTek Dimensity chipset, offering 5G-level performance in a 4G phone, while maintaining the value-driven ethos that defined the brand’s early promise.

By 2023, the BOLD N3 pushed things even further. It marked the brand’s first true embrace of 5G, adding a sharper AMOLED display, faster charging, and improved imaging hardware, and all of this was wrapped in an even more premium frame. The N3 cemented BOLD’s identity as the experimental edge of BLU’s ecosystem, where new materials, software refinements, and bold (sorry!) design choices could debut before trickling down to more affordable lines.

That progression of refinement by refinement is what sets the stage for the BOLD N4 5G, a device positioned not just as another budget disruptor, but as more of a culmination of several years of deliberate iteration. It’s the most technically confident BOLD phone yet, designed to close the gap between affordability and genuine flagship capability.

Design and Display: Premium Where It Counts

The first thing I noticed when unboxing the N4 is that it doesn’t look like a $299 phone. And it certainly doesn’t look like any previous BOLD N-series of phones. Each model is quite the departure from its predecessor and feels like a deliberate choice to try something different.

The curved edges of the 6.78-inch AMOLED display catch the light in a way that feels far more refined than the usual flat plastic you find in this tier. The 1200 x 2652 pixels display itself is a beauty: 120Hz refresh rate, rich contrast, and brightness that holds up outdoors. Just be prepared for it to grab fingerprints, oil, and other stuff from your hands if you’re not careful.

Scrolling feels genuinely flagship-smooth. Whether I was flipping through Gmail or gaming, the combination of that refresh rate and responsive touch input made everything feel faster than I expected. BOLD clearly wanted to deliver a screen that could stand toe-to-toe with the best Samsung and Motorola have to offer in the $500 range. And it mostly does.

Close-up of the BOLD N4 5G smartphone, showcasing its camera module with a 50MP lens and a dual-display design. The smaller secondary display shows the time, date, and battery percentage.

Around back, the phone adds a clever twist. There’s a small 1.74-inch OLED display tucked near the camera module. It might seem gimmicky at first, but it’s genuinely useful. I used it to check the time, peek at notifications, and line up selfies using the main 50MP camera instead of relying on the weaker front-facing one.

That trick alone makes a real difference if you like capturing better content. You get sharper images, better HDR, and a more natural depth of field because you’re using the same lens that handles your standard photography. The rear mini-display acts as your viewfinder, turning what could’ve been a throwaway feature into something functionally smart. It’s like adding one of the best reasons to own a flip phone without changing the overall design.

Performance and Daily Use: Punching Far Above Its Price

Specs can be misleading when taken in isolation, but the BOLD N4 backs them up with real-world speed. Inside is MediaTek’s Dimensity 7300X chip built on a 4nm process, which is the same class of architecture used in much pricier phones.

Day to day, that means smoother multitasking, quicker app launches, and less of the thermal throttling that tends to plague budget processors. In benchmarks, it looks to score around 704,000 on Antutu, essentially matching phones like Motorola’s Edge 2025, a device which costs nearly twice as much.

A close-up view of a smartphone screen displaying settings for virtual RAM configuration, with options for 8GB, 16GB, and 24GB, and a notification about needing to restart the phone to activate changes.

Numbers aside, I ran the N4 through my usual gauntlet: multitasking with Chrome, Gmail, Maps, Spotify, and Slack all active; switching between the camera and social apps; and streaming video while gaming in the background. It handled everything without lag. The combination of 8GB of DDR5 RAM and up to 24GB of “virtual Xtra RAM” helps here. Memory management feels tuned and responsive.

The real kicker, though, is storage. Half a terabyte of internal space in a $299 phone feels borderline absurd. I loaded it up with offline music, long-form video, a few games, and a mess of review photos, and still had breathing room. If you’re used to constantly juggling space, this alone is a luxury that feels liberating.

Both the memory and the storage are the types of corners that brands often cut and it would have been very easy for BOLD to go with 256GB RAM and a slower DDR4 RAM. Had they done that I probably would not have even batted an eye so kudos here for leaning forward.

Software: Current and Surprisingly Refined, But a Bit Too Much

The BOLD N4 5G ships with Android 15, and it’s mostly a clean implementation. There are a lot of custom features and settings one can do with the phone to make it feel truly unique. It looks and acts a lot like “stock” Android but it does invite users to look deeper and spend time with it.

I would like to say there are only a few extra apps loaded but that’s not the case. Indeed, there were at least a dozen titles installed that I can safely say I’d never touch. There’s also an Instant Games section that’s in the app drawer by default as well as a widget on the home screen’s right panel. These can be customized and removed. While I see their value for select people, I can imagine long-time Android users might feel put-off by the heavy-handedness.

There are a few other things you’ll want to enable, disable, or tailor to your liking as you get going, some of which might happen fairly early on in ownership. I wasn’t in love with the notifications and invisible hand pushing me to a few apps (Moments, News) so I turned them off.

I should also point out that the secondary display needs to be enabled in the settings to get the full experience. By default you can change the back to show a clock with custom colors but to use if for the camera and notifications, you’ve got to almost trip over that setting.

I looked through the phone’s settings and the camera app for more than a few minutes and could not really find anything. On a whim one night, I double tapped the rear screen and it told me I needed to adjust something in the phone. Flipping it over and allowing it, I then had access to the camera preview, notifications, a stopwatch, timer, recorder, and music player.

Android 15 adds its own nice touches, too: Private Space for hiding sensitive apps, better protection against theft, and smoother handling of media and PDF files. Combined with the N4’s hardware, it feels modern and complete right out of the box.

What I appreciated most was how ready the N4 felt for the U.S. market. It supports all the key 5G bands you’d expect (n2, n5, n25, n41, n66, n71, and n77) which translates to reliable signal and consistent speeds whether you’re on T-Mobile or AT&T. Some global budget phones can stumble on network compatibility but this one gets it right.

Cameras: Ambitious Hardware, Slightly Confused Messaging

On paper, the BOLD N4’s triple-camera setup looks impressive. The 50MP main lens delivers solid detail and color accuracy, backed by an 8MP ultra-wide camera for broader shots. In daylight, photos are sharp and well-balanced. The AI-driven processing helps keep exposure in check, and the dynamic range holds up surprisingly well.

Night Mode works decently too, though it leans into longer exposures and visible noise reduction that sometimes softens detail. Still, given the price, low-light results are respectable.

The elephant in the room is that third camera. BOLD’s pre-launch materials refer to it alternately as an 8MP telephoto lens and an 8MP macro lens, which, as you know, are two very different things. My testing suggests it’s a telephoto as the app shows .6x, 1x, and 3x zoom levels. Moreover, looking through the app settings I cannot find anything that enables a macro mode.

Video capture maxes out at 4K at 30fps and looks stable enough, thanks to Electronic Image Stabilization. For everyday clips and social content, it’s absolutely serviceable.

Close-up of the BOLD N4 5G smartphone showcasing its rear design, featuring a camera module with three lenses and a secondary display, held in a person's hand.

Where the camera shines is in its dual-screen versatility. Using the secondary display to frame main-camera selfies or vlogs gives the N4 a creative edge. Here, you’re capturing content on the best sensor available, not the usual underwhelming front lens.

Charging and Battery Life: The Fast Lane

Battery anxiety and nightly charging are tough habits to break, but the BOLD N4 makes things easier. The 5,000mAh battery easily lasts a full day, even with heavy use. Streaming, navigation, calls, gaming, etc… it all drains the phone at a slower pace than expected.

Then there’s the 66W fast charging. BOLD claims it can go from empty to full in 20 minutes. In my experience, it was closer to 25 to 30 depending on conditions, but that’s still lightning quick. It’s the kind of speed that changes how you use your phone. Plug it in while you’re making breakfast, and it’s ready before you leave the house.

Phones in this price bracket typically offer 30W or maybe 45W charging, so this feels like a genuine differentiator. Again, this would be a corner I’d expect to have seen cut.

Audio, Biometrics, and the Everyday Details

Audio is often an afterthought in budget phones, but the N4 delivers clear, full sound through its dual speakers. There’s decent separation and enough bass to keep movies and games lively without distortion. I hate music on phones for the most part so I can’t speak to anything longer or much different than a few moments of testing. Audible books and podcasts, though, came out loud and clear.

A person holding the BOLD N4 5G smartphone, showcasing the top edge with a glossy finish, buttons, and speaker grill.

Biometric security is handled by an in-display fingerprint reader that unlocks in under half a second, paired with a quick and reliable Face ID system. Nothing flashy, just smooth execution.

Performance in Context: Outrunning the Competition

When you stack the BOLD N4 against its nearest rivals, the numbers tell the story. The Motorola Moto G Power (2025) costs about the same but runs on an older Dimensity 6300 processor and posts a much lower benchmark score. Plus there’s only 128GB of storage there, too. Samsung’s Galaxy A36 costs $100 more and still trails behind in both performance and storage.

Even against the $549 Motorola Edge 2025, the N4 keeps pace within a few percentage points in performance. You’re essentially getting 98 percent of a mid-premium experience for just over half the cost.

That’s why the N4 feels disruptive. It’s priced like a budget phone but behaves like something far higher up the food chain. If anything, I hope this changes expectations for consumers at $300.

Where It Falls Short

No phone at this price hits perfection, and the N4 has its rough edges. Now that it’s officially announced, the macro-versus-telephoto confusion seems to be wrapped up but I worry there may be a mixed signal out there somewhere

The software could also benefit from longer update guarantees. Android 15 is a strong starting point, but without a clear commitment to two or three years of updates, longevity becomes an open question.

Do we necessarily need to compete with the five and seven year stuff from flagship devices? Absolutely not. Yet still, we’re holding onto our phones longer, on average, so an update or two should be expected.

Lastly, while the secondary display is genuinely useful, its interface could evolve further. I would like to imagine customizable widgets or quick app controls rather than static info panels. It’s a promising idea that deserves refinement. For a first-gen attempt, I like it. Next time around, I want to love it.

Who It’s For

The BOLD N4 5G is priced for the everyman, but feels made for people who want premium speed, design, and flexibility without blowing their budget. It’s a great fit for mobile gamers who crave performance, creators who want more storage and camera control, or professionals who need fast charging and reliable 5G connectivity on a daily driver.

If you’re the kind of person who measures value in tangible performance rather than brand recognition, this phone will likely surprise you.

Final Thoughts: BOLD Ambition That Mostly Delivers

The BOLD N4 5G isn’t just another “affordable” phone trying to imitate something better or hope you notice it. It’s an intentional, well-calculated attempt to change what “midrange” can mean, and for the most part, it succeeds.

I love it when the race to the bottom changes quickly and I think that the baseline for entry-level and midrange phones needs adjusted. The N4 is the sort of device that can do that, provided it get enough attention.

It’s fast, generous with storage, cleverly designed, and genuinely practical in ways that make daily use better. Sure, a few details need tightening, but at this price, there’s little else that competes so evenly across performance, display, and charging.

Typically priced $299, the BOLD N4 5G is available through Amazon with launch day special. For a limited time, or perhaps while supplies last, you can get your hands on it for just $249. I’m already recommending it to readers at the standard price so that early adopter discount just makes it that much more appealing.

Note: This content may contain affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission for purchases made using them.

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Every so often, a budget-friendly phone comes along that feels like it’s been designed to make you question how much money you actually need to spend for something fast, capable, and modern. The BOLD N4 5G is one of those rare devices. At $299, it...BOLD N4 Review