• The Lava Bold N2 Lite launches in India at ₹6,999, positioning itself as an ultra-budget smartphone.
  • It runs on the Unisoc SC9863A chipset paired with Android 15 Go Edition, designed for basic tasks.
  • A key feature for its price is the inclusion of a 90Hz refresh rate on its 6.75-inch HD+ display.

Here's the play. You want a new phone, but your budget is tighter than a new headphone jack. Lava's answer is the Bold N2 Lite, a device that makes one promise: it will cost less than seven thousand rupees. The rest is a story of calculated compromises.

Lava Bold N2 Lite Specifications

SpecificationDetails
ProcessorUnisoc SC9863A (Octa-core)
RAM3GB / 4GB (Sources conflict)
Storage64GB
Display6.75-inch HD+ (720 x 1600) IPS, U-shaped notch, up to 90Hz refresh rate
Rear CameraSingle Sensor (Resolution unspecified in sources)
Battery5000 mAh, Li-Polymer
Operating SystemAndroid 15 (Go edition)
Price in India₹6,999

What's New & Key Features

Lava's big pitch here is software. The Bold N2 Lite is one of the first phones you can buy with Android 15 Go Edition. That's the lightweight Android build meant for phones with 2GB of RAM or less. It uses smaller, stripped-down Google apps to free up space and memory. This isn't a minor detail, it's the whole strategy. Pairing a basic chip with a lean OS is the only way this thing stands a chance of feeling usable. Then there's the screen. A 90Hz refresh rate on a ₹6,999 phone is genuinely unexpected. It means scrolling through your contacts or a news feed should feel smoother, at least in theory. But that theory depends entirely on whether the ancient chip inside can keep up.

Design, Build & Display

You're getting a 6.75-inch HD+ screen with a waterdrop notch. That's a big panel for the money, no question. But the resolution is just 720 x 1600. You do the math on that pixel density (it's about 260 PPI), and you'll know the deal. Text and videos will look fine from a normal distance. Lean in close, and you'll see the pixels. The body is almost certainly plastic. The real star here isn't the screen or the build, it's the 5,000 mAh battery. That's a huge cell for any phone. On this hardware, with its low-res screen and simple chip, it should last for ages. Think a day and a half, maybe two, if you're just texting and checking the weather.

Performance & Software: The Unisoc SC9863A & Android Go Combo

The Chipset: Unisoc SC9863A

Let's talk about the engine. The Unisoc SC9863A is an octa-core chip built on a 28nm manufacturing process. For perspective, that's a process node from a bygone era. This isn't a 5G chip. It's a budget 4G part from several generations back. What does that mean for you? It means it'll handle calls, WhatsApp, and Facebook Lite. It means you can browse the web, as long as you don't mind waiting a beat for pages to load. What it won't do is play PUBG Mobile smoothly, or let you jump between five apps without a stutter. This chip is here for one reason: to hit that ₹6,999 price.

The RAM Conundrum & Android 15 Go

Here's a fun problem. Some sources say this phone has 3GB of RAM. Others say 4GB. That's a big difference when you're running Android Go. Android Go is designed to stretch limited memory further, so 3GB might be enough for the basics. But 4GB would be a lot more comfortable. We won't know which is correct until the phone is in reviewers' hands. The pairing with Android 15 Go is the smart move, though. Without it, this hardware would choke. With it, there's a fighting chance.

Battery, Cameras & Connectivity

The 5,000 mAh battery is this phone's best feature. It's the one spec that isn't a compromise. With that HD+ screen and the simple Unisoc chip sipping power, you can expect marathon battery life. It's perfect if you forget to charge your phone overnight, or if you're traveling somewhere without easy access to an outlet. Just don't expect it to refill quickly. Charging speed isn't mentioned, which means it's probably the standard slow 10W rate. Now, the cameras. The specs are a mystery. The rear is listed only as a "single sensor" with no megapixel count. That tells you everything. It'll take a photo of a document or a well-lit park. Don't plan on capturing your kid's soccer game at dusk. And no, there's no 5G. You're getting 4G, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth. That's the deal at this price.

India Pricing, Availability, and Considerations

The price is set: ₹6,999. You'll be able to buy it on Amazon. Our sources don't mention any launch-day bank discounts or bundle deals, so you should assume that's the straight price. It's always worth checking the Amazon product page when you buy, in case there's a sale or a temporary promotion. What you won't find in the specs sheet is info about Lava's service network. If you live outside a major city, you'll want to look up whether there's a repair center nearby before you commit. Warranty details are also missing, so that's another question for the retailer.

The Verdict

So who is this for? It's for someone who needs a phone that makes calls, sends texts, and lasts forever on a charge, and who absolutely cannot spend more than seven thousand rupees. It's a solid pick for a secondary device, or for a first smartphone where the budget is the boss. That 90Hz screen and fresh Android 15 Go software are legitimately interesting for the money. But if you so much as think about playing a game or using two apps at once, you'll hit a wall. For about three to five thousand rupees more, you can get a phone from realme or Xiaomi with a much more capable processor. That's the real choice here: save every last rupee, or spend a little more to get a phone that won't make you want to throw it against a wall in a month.

Sources

  • technobugg.com
  • cashkr.com
  • moneycontrol.com
  • gsmarena.com
  • devicespecifications.com
  • facebook.com
  • instagram.com
Filed Under
lava bold n2 liteunisoc sc9863aandroid 15 go edition90hz displaylava indiabudget smartphone5000mah battery6.75-inch hd+