Creative Zen V Plus Review

£110Jan 2007

Stuff says 5 Hot Buy

Top package, including bundled software and earphones, makes Creative’s energetic sounding portable a welcome addition to the fluff-laden space known as your pocket.

Images

Stuff magazine Wed, Jan 17 2007, 7:00AM

Creative’s MP3 player finds itself bang in the middle of Nano territory – the “even better than the original thing” Apple is the sales leader in this portable category and, on first impressions, the Zen V Plus could struggle to compete. Up against the iPod this plasticky effort feels a bit like baby’s first MP3 player.

Plastic fantastic
Get past the lack of “look what I just slid from my pocket” appeal and there’s some welcome reverse psychology going on: the plastic casework makes this machine less of a target for that terrorising gang of ASBO’d eight year olds, and you worry less about protecting it from the scary world of MP3-case annihilating enemies, such as sets of keys and angular fifty-pence pieces.

More than just a psychological bonus is the Creative’s small chassis – it’s no bigger than a Zippo lighter – and the Zen V Plus slips easily in to the tightest pocket of your skinniest (so last year, by the way) jeans. At 44g, it’s not the type of player to hold you back when you want to travel light.

There’s nothing lightweight, however, about this machine’s feature list. Video replay is available, plus there’s a line-in for recording from external sources, such as CD players. There’s even a voice recorder, useful for journalists and weirdos.

You’ve been fingered
Talking of weird journalists, the Stuff review team was split on the ’Plus’s user system: some lauded its little joystick, while others, primarily those with fat butcher fingers, found it tricky. Overall opinion is the system works well, but you should give it a prod before you part with your greens.

Don’t fret about double-checking the Creative’s sound delivery, this MP3 machine blasts out tunes with attitude, rivalling the Nano for get up and go. The bundled buds help matters, offering above-average sound quality, as well as a snug fit.

Load some vision and the screen is fine for music videos but it’s not the sort of set-up you’d want to use for a quick game of “spot the minute detail in the dark and dingy movie scene”. Contrast could be better, too, meaning the screen can look a little washed out when watched in brightly lit surroundings.

As you would expect from a portable that doesn’t emanate from California, this Creative doesn’t embrace purchased iTunes, but it’ll happily chew on MP3 and WMA so no major issue there. The bundled software is decent, or you can just stick to Windows Media Player.

Battery life, at 15hrs, isn’t class-leading, but unless your joining a Virginal beard-face on a round-the-world balloon flight, the Zen V Plus should easily get you from A to B.

Use it with…

Stuff Essentials – In-ear headphones

Comments

  1. ashdad2@hotmail.com

    5 years ago

    i have just bought the v plus 4 Gb and on first glance it looks rather cheap and plasticy, but this is my third mp3 from creative so i have learnt that looks can be deceptive. i paired the player with a pair of sennheisser earphones which sound great but this is not really necessary as the creative earphones also sound good. file transfer is simple drag and drop using the creative software or windows media. video playback is good quality and the radio is clear and once you find the stations. i had a sony mp3 but sold it after a week because of the over complicated software and playback quality. my son is now selling his ipod and buying a zen 30gb. buy one you won't regret it.

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