When choosing a smartphone, not every user looks at specifications in the same way. A student who mainly needs social media and online classes won’t require the same specs as a gamer or a professional who depends on productivity features. The right phone depends on how the device will be used — whether for casual calling, entertainment, photography, gaming, business, or chasing the latest technology. Below is a categorization of users with the key specifications, chipsets (with their nanometer technology), and typical price ranges that best suit them.


User Category

Display

RAM & Storage

Camera

Battery

Chipset (Example, nm)

Price Range

Casual / Basic Users

6–6.5" HD, 60 Hz–90Hz

3–4 GB / 64–128 GB

8–13 MP rear, 5–8 MP front

4000–5000 mAh

Helio G35 (12 nm), Snapdragon 680 (6 nm)

$100–150 (NPR 13k–20k)

Social Media & Entertainment

FHD+, AMOLED, 90–120 Hz

6–8 GB / 128–256 GB

48–64 MP rear, 16–32 MP selfie

5000 mAh, 30W+

Dimensity 810 (6 nm), Snapdragon 778G (6 nm)

$200–350 (NPR 26k–45k)

Photography / Content Creators

AMOLED, HDR10

8–12 GB / 256 GB+

50–200 MP, OIS, 4K/8K video

4500–5000 mAh

Dimensity 9200 (4 nm), Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 (4 nm)

$400–700 (NPR 52k–90k)

Gamers

AMOLED, 120–165 Hz, high touch rate

8–16 GB / 256–512 GB

Decent but not priority

5000–6000 mAh, 65–120W

Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4 nm), Dimensity 9200+ (4 nm)

$500–800 (NPR 65k–105k)

Business / Professionals

AMOLED, 6.5–7.0", bright

8–12 GB / 256–512 GB

Balanced (good but secondary)

5000 mAh, 30–65W

Snapdragon 870 (7 nm), Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (4 nm)

$400–900 (NPR 52k–117k)

Tech Enthusiasts / Flagship Lovers

2K AMOLED, LTPO, 120–144 Hz

12–24 GB / 512 GB–1 TB

Flagship setup, periscope zoom, 8K

4500–5000 mAh, wireless + reverse charging

Apple A17 Pro (3 nm), Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 (4 nm), Dimensity 9300 (4 nm)

$1000+ (NPR 130k+)


 Summary

Smartphones can be grouped by the type of user, their needs, and budget. Entry-level users can find capable phones under $150 with 6–12 nm chipsets and long-lasting batteries. Social media and entertainment users prefer AMOLED displays and better cameras, typically in the $200–350 range. Content creators and gamers demand high-performance 4 nm chipsets, strong graphics, and premium displays, often costing $400–800. Professionals balance productivity and security with mid- to high-range phones priced between $400–900. Meanwhile, tech enthusiasts invest in ultra-premium devices above $1000, powered by cutting-edge 3–4 nm processors and loaded with the latest innovations. In short, the ideal smartphone depends not just on specs but on the balance between user needs, chipset efficiency, and budget.

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