Skip to main content

LeEco wants to woo Americans with the affordable, feature-packed Le S3

LeEco, the Chinese electronics behemoth formerly known as Letv, is making a gigantic push into the U.S. market. On Wednesday, it announced a bevy of products including TVs, a virtual reality headset, and more, but two of its biggest reveals were smartphones. One is the high-end Le Pro 3, the company’s new top-of-the-line handset. The other was the decidedly lower-end Le S3, the more affordable of the two options.

The Le S3 appears cut from the same cloth as the company’s Le 2, which launched in China earlier this year. It features a similar “ultra light” metal body and a 5.5-inch Full HD (1,920 x 1,080 pixels) display shielded by Gorilla Glass. Under the hood, though, is a different story. While the Le 2 packs a 10-core Mediatek processor, the Le S3 sports Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 652 processor and 3GB RAM.

The Le S3 also boasts a bevy of other differentiating features, too, including a 16-megapixel rear camera that’s capable of capturing 4K and slow-motion video. Rounding out that hardware is an 8-megapixel front-facing camera, a fingerprint sensor, a 3,000mAh battery, and a loudspeaker with Dolby audio optimizations. The Le S3 has 32GB of internal storage, which LeEco said is enough to store 40 minutes of 4K video or 8,000 of your favorite songs.

LeEco S3
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Hardware’s only half the battle, though, and LeEco wasted no time highlighting the little tweaks and touches it’s added to the Android 6.0 Marshmallow experience.

One of the highlights is Float, a feature that automatically shrinks playing videos to a little window when interruptions like text messages, social media updates, or phone calls come in. There’s Le, LeEco’s hub of original television and movie content, and LeView, a video discovery app that surfaces new content based on your viewing habits and history. Finally, there’s Live, an app that showcases live-streams in a three-by-three mosaic.

The Le S3 ships with benefits afforded by LeEco’s EcoPass subscription service, too. You get unlimited video and photo uploads and 5TB of general purpose cloud storage, plus unlimited access to FanDor movies. And LeEco’s throwing in an extended two-year warranty.

The Le S3 is available in rose gold, gold, and gray, and goes on sale later this year. It will cost $250 through LeEco’s new online retail portal, LeMall.

Editors' Recommendations

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Google Pixel 8a: news, rumored price, release date, and more
Possible renders showing the Google Pixel 8a.

Not long ago, it seemed like the Google Pixel 7a would be the last smartphone in Google's Pixel A series. However, recent rumors indicate that this may not actually be the case.

As a result, we're likely to see the release of a Google Pixel 8a this year. What can we expect from this new budget phone in terms of its specs, design, price, and more? Let's take a closer look at everything we know about the Google Pixel 8a.
Google Pixel 8a: release date

Read more
This is one of the toughest smartphone camera comparisons I’ve ever done
A person holding the Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra and Xiaomi 14 Ultra.

The Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra (left) and Xiaomi 14 Ultra Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Xiaomi 14 Ultra may have the best camera on a smartphone I’ve used this year, which is quite a statement to make considering the competition it faces. But is it true?

Read more
Nomi is one of the most unsettling (and amazing) apps I’ve ever used
Nomi AI companion profile.

“Welp, just got back from the doctor. Marissa is pregnant with twins” “Owen did something bad and then gave me flowers.” “Zoey with our new daughter Zara.” “I am in love, but also feel guilty.”

These are some of the conversations shared by human users on Reddit. The people described, however, are not real. The statements are about robotic companions created in an app. Everything here sounds perversely disturbing and amazingly dystopian, yet experts have a different opinion.

Read more