AT&T R225 (GoPhone, silver, Prepaid/Pay As You Go)

CNET Editors' Rating

2.5 stars
    Overall score: 5.6 (2.5 stars)

OK

Average User Rating

3 reviews

Starting at: $25.98

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CNET Editors' Review

CNET Editors' Rating

2.5 stars OK
    Overall score: 5.6 (2.5 stars)
  • Design: 6.0
  • Features: 5.0
  • Performance: 6.0
Edited by: Kent German

The good: The AT&T R225 is a petite, attractive phone with admirable call quality and a rock-bottom price.

The bad: A small screen and lousy speakerphone are bummers, but the lack of Bluetooth and a volume rocker are the R225's biggest disappointments.

The bottom line: As long as you never have cause to use it hands-free, the AT&T R225 will reward you with good call quality. Yet, the absent volume rocker makes it best-suited for occasional callers.

Review:

ZTE may shroud its identity in the branding of the AT&T R225, but the cell phone manufacturer is indeed behind this AT&T prepaid GoPhone. ZTE has a history of making tall, slim cell phones, like the ZTE C79 and the Agent, and the R225 fits right into the profile. Its petite body, combined with very good call quality and a rock-bottom $14.99 price tag without a contract, keeps the AT&T R225 in the running for an entry-level phone. However, several oversights--the lack of a volume rocker among them--makes the ... Expand full review

ZTE may shroud its identity in the branding of the AT&T R225, but the cell phone manufacturer is indeed behind this AT&T prepaid GoPhone. ZTE has a history of making tall, slim cell phones, like the ZTE C79 and the Agent, and the R225 fits right into the profile. Its petite body, combined with very good call quality and a rock-bottom $14.99 price tag without a contract, keeps the AT&T R225 in the running for an entry-level phone. However, several oversights--the lack of a volume rocker among them--makes the R225 suited for calls and other light use.

Design
The R225 is black and bright silver with silver accents that help make it look like a much more premium handset than it is. At 4.2 inches tall, 1.8 inches wide, and 0.5 inch thick, the R225 it fits well into small hands and feels comfortable on the ear and in the hand, thanks in part to a soft-touch material on the back cover. At 2.9 ounces it's also quite light without feeling wispy.


The AT&T R225 is slim, stylish, and portable.

Only 1.8 inches, the R225's screen feels disappointingly undersize. Of course, it's small enough to mask the low 128x160-pixel resolution (262,000 colors), which comes across as bright, but blurry around the edges. A straightforward grid of menu choices and soft key options aid the navigation, so it's easy to get around. The R225's hardware navigation buttons also are useful. Unlike the uncomfortably cramped ZTE Agent, the R225 gives the soft keys and Talk and End buttons breathing room. We had no problems with the four-way directional pad and the central select button. Likewise, the backlit dial pad buttons were spacious and responsive enough. There are shared buttons for turning the phone to vibrate mode, and for locking the screen. Although they are separated, keys are too close to consistently dial by feel.

When it comes to external features, ZTE has taken austerity to a new level. The sole deviation you'll see on the otherwise smooth perimeter is the Micro-USB charging port. On the back there's no camera, just the external speaker. While many cell phone owners can live without the usually grainy quality in low-end cameras, what we can't fathom is why ZTE chose to leave out the volume rocker, which should by now be a standard component on any phone. You can still adjust a call's volume with the navigation toggle.

Features
The R225's feature set is on the lean side, but is more padded than we first expected. The address book holds 1,000 entries and has room for multiple phone numbers, e-mail addresses, and a URL. You can assign a photo and calling group to a contact, and can also assign one of 11 ringtones, plus a ringtone from a file stored on the phone. Since there's no SD card support for transferring your own music, you'll need to download additional ringtones from AT&T's online store to expand your options.

Essential tools on the R255 include an alarm clock, a calendar, a calculator, a to-do list, and a stop watch. International travelers will appreciate the currency converter and world clock. There's also an audio recorder.

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Average User Rating

3.0 stars out of 3 user reviews

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star: 1
  • 4 star: 1
  • 3 star: 0
  • 2 star: 0
  • 1 star: 1

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Most recent user reviews

Showing 3 of 3 reviews

4.0 stars

"Good phone for money spent but..." By mikislate

Pros: Inexpensive, has voice recorder, simple mobile web access.

Cons: This by far the worst part, when going through the menus you have you wait for the phone to catch up. If you try to key ahead you end up in the wrong menu or it just doesn't go anywhere. And the more I use it the more annoying it becomes.

5.0 stars

"It's not a fully packed phone? So what!" By narn3049

Pros: It has a little sum of features that seniors or first time users would use. ZTE and ATT really thought of the customer with this

Cons: I really don't have any, it gets the job done

Summary: I needed a simple phone for a trip I was taking and used it then- it worked VERY well, and was a good phone- you need to get this phone if you want a basic phone. It is not bad- and it is a pretty sweet phone- so get-get-get.

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Specifications

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Quick Specs

  • Service provider: AT&T
  • Cellular technology: GSM
  • Talk time: Up to 318 min

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