Mr Techpedia
Smartphones, Software Tools, and Tech Industry Trends with a focus on usability and market analysis.
Nutrition Label
Mr Techpedia delivers accessible, high-energy coverage of smartphones and viral gadgets with a focus on practical usability. While hands-on reviews and tips are grounded in direct experience, content covering rumors or future releases is naturally more speculative. Viewers can expect a mix of solid buying advice and broad industry commentary.
Strengths
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Notes
- !Treat discussions about unreleased devices with more caution than the hands-on reviews.
- !Verify specific claims in news-focused videos, as they rely less on direct testing.
Rating Breakdown
Breakdown across the key dimensions we rate. Methodology →
Recent Videos

S26 Ultra first 100 hour review

Avoid this phone even in sale!!

What’s new with the new iQOO 15R?

I tested this “ALMOST” flagship phone

I Tested 10 Viral Instagram Gadgets - Useful or Not?

Is this the new flagship killer?

Samsung S26 series is not what you think!!

What is wrong with Nothing?

What is wrong with Airtel and Jio?

A big news for iPhone users

Best and worst smartphone brands

50 smartphone tricks in 10 minutes

Why ₹25,000 is the new ‘Budget’ phone?

This phone deserves your attention (Long Term Review)
Why this rating
Evidence receipts showing why each dimension is rated the way it is.
“Lekin isko kaafi din humne test kara toh yeh 10-12 minute chalke khud hi band ho jata hai... agar main isko is angle pe rakhta hoon toh yeh jhuk jata hai apne aap.”[01:44] →
The creator demonstrates specific failure modes (overheating shut-off and poor physical balance) that prove hands-on testing.
“Isko aise hila hila ke kiwi ko ghumana pad raha hai kyunki woh phas jaati hai us section pe jaake.”[06:38] →
Shows the struggle of using the viral vegetable peeler, proving it jams frequently despite the marketing hype.
“When 10-15k doesn't get you a decent option anymore, the user is forced to go up... starting point will be 25k.”[02:18] →
The video content directly answers the title's premise by detailing the economic factors shifting the 'budget' baseline.
“The Nothing Phone (3) launched in India on July 1, 2025... with a starting price of ₹79,999.”[04:06] →
The video relies on fabricated news articles with future dates (2025) to support its narrative, presenting a speculative scenario as factual evidence.