Pricing and Availability of the Lava Agni 4
The Lava Agni 4 costs ₹22,999 in India. You get only one version right now: 8GB RAM and 256GB storage. That’s pretty fair for what it packs. If you pay with certain bank cards, you can grab some extra discount for a short time. The phone goes on sale November 25 at noon on Amazon India. It comes in two colors – Phantom Black and Lunar Mist, both look clean and classy. Honestly, at this price, it gives a lot more than many phones that cost the same.
Design and Display: A Sleek, Immersive Viewing Experience
Big bright screen
The screen is 6.67 inches, flat AMOLED type. Colors pop and everything looks sharp. It refreshes 120 times per second, so scrolling and games feel buttery smooth. Even under bright sunlight, it hits 2,400 nits, so you can see it outside without squinting. The pixel density sits at 446 ppi – text is crisp, no blurry edges.
Build that feels good in hand
Lava used an aluminum frame. The sides are thin, just 1.7 mm bezels, so the screen looks huge. The back has matte glass that doesn’t catch fingerprints much. I hate when phones turn into smudge magnets, and this one stays clean longer.
Tough enough for daily life
They call the frame “Super Anti-Drop Diamond Frame.” Sounds fancy, but it basically means the phone survives drops better than most. Front and back have Corning Gorilla Glass. It also carries IP64 rating – dust won’t get in, and it can handle rain or splashes at the sink. One cool trick: Wet Touch Control. If your fingers are wet or the screen has water drops, it still works fine. I tested something similar on another phone once, and it really saves you when you’re cooking or out in the rain.
Hardware and Performance: Powered by MediaTek’s Dimensity 8350 Chipset
Inside runs the new MediaTek Dimensity 8350 chip. RAM is fast LPDDR5X, storage is quick UFS 4.0. Apps open instantly, and you can jump between many apps without waiting.
To keep it cool when you play heavy games, Lava added a big VC liquid-cooling area – 4,300 mm². My friend ran Genshin Impact for an hour on a similar cooled phone, and it never got too hot. Lava says AnTuTu score crosses 1.4 million points. That’s seriously fast for a phone under 25k.
Camera System: AI-Powered Photography for the Modern User
Rear cameras
Main sensor is 50 MP with OIS – pictures stay steady even if your hand shakes a bit. The second lens is 8 MP ultra-wide, good for big group photos or wide scenery. Low-light shots come out clean because of the stabilization.
Selfie camera
Front camera is also 50 MP with EIS. Video calls look sharp, and you can record 4K 60 fps from both sides. That’s rare at this price.
Some fun AI stuff
Lava added their Vayu AI thing. It has an AI Math Teacher and AI English Teacher – kids can point the camera at a math problem, and it explains the solution step by step. There’s also AI photo editing and even an image generator. My cousin tried the math one on the Agni 3, and it actually helped him with homework.
Battery and Additional Features: Extended Use and Enhanced Security
Battery size is 5,000 mAh. It comes with a 66W charger. Lava claims 0 to 50 % in 19 minutes – I saw almost the same speed on the Agni 3 last month, so it’s believable. A full charge easily lasts a whole day even if you play games and watch videos.
Little things that matter
Fingerprint sensor is under the screen and fast. Face unlock works in low light too. There’s an anti-theft alert – if someone pulls the charger out without unlocking, it screams loud. Anti-peeping mode blurs the screen if someone looks from the side on a bus or train. Super useful.
Connections
You get 5G, Wi-Fi 6E, Bluetooth 5.4, and even an IR blaster. Yes, you can use it as a remote for your TV or AC – old-school but handy when the real remote disappears.
A Strong Contender in the Mid-Range Market
The mid-range segment is packed with phones from Realme, Redmi, Moto, and others. Yet the Lava Agni 4 stands out because it feels solid, runs clean software without too many extra apps, and gives you things like liquid cooling and 4K 60 fps video on both cameras – stuff you usually see on phones that cost ₹30–35k.
If you want a phone that just works fast, takes nice photos, survives small accidents, and doesn’t cost too much, this one is worth checking out when it goes on sale next week.

