4. The camera itself is really neat: You can actually control the placement of the motorized camera to capture any angle, up to a full 180 degrees.
The phone's volume rocker can act as a controller for how much you want the camera to flip up, and the phone's Camera app also presents a slider that allows you to swipe up or down to control the placement of the camera.
8. The Zenfone 6 has a massive 5,000 mAh battery, one of the biggest batteries in any smartphone you can buy.
For comparison, Samsung's massive Galaxy S10 Plus has a 4,100 mAH battery, and the similarly large iPhone XS Max has a 3,174 mAH battery.
(Milliamp-hours aren't always indicative of battery life — how the software uses the battery also plays a big role, for example — but it tends to be a pretty good indication of how much juice your phone will get.)
We don't know exactly how many hours of battery life the Zenfone 6 will get, but we're going to guess that it should easily last you a full day — especially since LCD screens don't suck up as much power compared to phones with OLED screens or higher refresh rates.
It even has — gasp — a headphone jack.
This is good in case your wireless headphones die, or you prefer a wired pair.
Overall, the Zenfone 6 packs in a ton of innovation for an incredible value.
It has everything you want in a smartphone: a great display, a great camera system, and (presumably) killer battery life, thanks to that super-large cell. Asus also did a good thing here by providing a pretty clean version of Android, and keeping the starting price at a competitive $500.
This phone should definitely be considered if you're looking for a quality smartphone that won't blow your budget.
You can learn more about the Zenfone 6 here.