As Google launched the Pixel 10a, I did what everyone else does: opened the sheet, compared the chip with what other smartphones offer at the same price, and felt the familiar unease. I asked myself one question: “Why is Google even doing this?”
The Pixel 10a featured a Tensor G4 chip (from 2024) that didn’t impress in benchmarks, thicker front bezels, a 120Hz display without a truly variable refresh rate, no telephoto camera, and a battery that supported slower charging than the competition. On paper, it looked like a phone that lost a fight before even entering the ring (and for a rumble match no less).
Four weeks later, I’ve arrived at a position that I didn’t think I would, but I want to defend: the Pixel 10a’s spec sheet is the wrong document on which to judge this phone. After weeks of regular usage, I realized that the Pixel 10a isn’t for people who buy phones (especially after reading the spec sheet) ̦— it’s for those who actually live with them.
A screen that you stop noticing (in a good way)
Let’s start with the display. Yes, the bezels are thicker than what you’d see on rivals, and the phone doesn’t use an LTPO panel that drops to 1Hz when the screen is idle. However, it was only after days of consistent use that I realized app transitions were fluid, navigation gestures were well synced with your fingers (and the speed at which you swipe), and general scrolling felt seamless on the Pixel 10a.
The Pixel 10a was bright enough on a hot, sunny day, so I didn’t have to shield the screen with my hand, and that’s what matters, not just the peak brightness numbers.
The chip doesn’t do well in benchmarks but nails daily usage

The chipset argument is even easier for me to dissolve at this point. The Tensor G4 trails the Tensor G5 by a significant margin. However, it’s when I used it as a primary device (along with my iPhone 17) that I realized it never feels like it doesn’t benchmark well.
Google, being the name behind the Android operating system, has optimized the chipset (and the supporting hardware) so well that I didn’t notice the difference in day-to-day usage. First-party apps open almost immediately, and Google’s Gemini AI assistant runs seamlessly (since it has a capable TPU).
You could argue that the Pixel 10a’s competitors offer a dedicated telephoto lens for added versatility, but after capturing approximately 800 pictures and some 100 videos with the device, I’ve come to the conclusion that two well-tuned lenses and years of computational photography improvements outperform three mediocre ones.
Great cameras and battery life round out the experience

Whether you know the Pixel 10a’s primary camera’s resolution or not, it surely captures images that are balanced and natural, with consistently accurate (or near-accurate) skin tones. Features like Night Sight and Photo Unblur, which add to the photography experience, aren’t even bolted to the hardware.
The same is true for the Pixel 10a’s battery, which easily provides me with around seven to eight hours of screen-on time. On 12 to 14-hour workdays, the battery often carries into the next morning. The charging speed is still behind the competition, but I guess the phone isn’t built for last-minute top-ups after all; the focus here is endurance, not speed.
All of this, in my opinion, is rounded up by Google’s flawless Android experience, which does its duty on the device in its purest and most efficient form. The Pixel 10a is clearly an example of how a phone with not-so-impressive hardware can still provide excellent usability through well-optimized software, which is also what the company is basing its seven years of software support on.
Pixel 10a: The phone that simply works

The Pixel 10a isn’t the phone that wins in spec comparisons. It’s one that wins on Tuesday afternoons, when you need a quick Gemini answer, capture a picture against the light, or a battery that goes a long way even when you’re around the anxious mark of 10%. You can’t run the overall experience through a benchmark, and that’s where the specs debate has stopped bothering me.




