Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020’s first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)

Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020's first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)

Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020’s first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)”.
Romi made a statement with the x2 Pro late last year, proving that they meant business in the flagship killer space. The x50 Pro 5 G is an update and improvement on the winner of last year’s best valid awards. It’S a step up from what we’ve seen from real me in the past, and let me talk to you about it. The biggest improvement that the guys that really have made can be found in the exterior. The smooth, matte glass finish gives the phone a uniquely subtle. Look that many will appreciate in the sea of shiny and funky colors when it catches the light.

A certain way it brightens up and makes for a nice effect. The fit and finish of the rest of the phone is spot-on, with no creaks, no rattles or any flex. It feels like a bit of a unit and that 207 gram weight certainly backs it up.

That being said, it’s not perfect. It hasn’t got the thinnest bezels in the world and the design as a whole. It’S a little bit dated, especially on the rear, because stripping that color away the placement of the Romi logo and the camera module. Look like they’ve been copied from the past few real nice, making the X 50 pro 5 G blend in and look kind of close to a Romi v, which is a completely different handset.

Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020's first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)

The only place it doesn’t look the same as of the real nice is at the front with the punch hole which is something we haven’t seen from the company in the past, similar to past Romy’s. We have a six and a half inch full HD 90 Hertz. I’M a LED display a four thousand two hundred million power battery and some of the best specs in the business this time around.

Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020's first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)

There’S a snapdragon 865 up to 12 gigabytes of ram 256 gigabytes of storage, 65 fast charging. It’S got the full monty, something that we haven’t seen from Rohmer before is 5g, and, as you probably guessed from the title, this phone has it. Sub 6 is what’s being offered here and given that and the rest of the specs at this price, it’s something that we haven’t seen before. Rumi is kind of breaking the mold here and something that I really have to give the company praised for its its continuation. In making the software really good, color OS is what was used right at the start of the romy smartphones, and, if we’re all honest, it wasn’t very good. It had lots of glottal occations.

There was too much going on and it didn’t feel very clean. Rumia Y has stepped up in the past months to a point where this is a me: y1 UI and emui competitor IMO they’ve clears out tons of bloatware, including that infamous hot apps, app folder thing that’s gone now. The software as a whole feels so much cleaner and closer to stock, and it definitely behaves that way as well.

They’Ve cleared out tons of bloatware and introduced a cleaner, subtler, more sophisticated, aesthetic to their interface. The phone is launching with android 10 and a combination of this and its tricked out internals, meaning that this phone is very quick performance, as expected by looking at the spec sheet is really good. However, I did have a small problem with the camera, where the camera app would crash.

Realme X50 Pro 5G: 2020's first flagship killer is FAST (Review!)

If I was switching from photo to video. This is something that should be able to be fixed in a software update. However, it stood out and Marge, and otherwise very faultless experience, including a day-and-a-half battery life thanks to the 4200 milliamp hour battery.

But the real star of the show here is the 65 watt super dark charging that takes the x50 pro 5g from 0 to 100. In 45 minutes and 0 to 90 percent in 30 minutes and if you’re stopping there and thinking those numbers seem a little bit off it’s because up to 90 %, the phone charges normally, which is to say very quickly. But then, after that room, we trickle charges a smartphone to prolong the overall battery health, which is quite a smart move. So far, the x50 pro 5 G is at the level of the oneplus 70, if not beating one plus 70. In a lot of cases, thanks to its newest spec sheet, but we need to talk about the cameras, because that tends to be a flagship killers, Achilles heel, we’re treated to a quad camera layout on the back. This is a 64 megapixel main camera and 8 megapixel aux wide 12 megapixel telephoto and a 2 megapixel black-and-white camera to aid with the portrait mode up front.

There’S a dual camera layout, featuring a 32 megapixel main sensor and an 8 megapixel ultralight with six cameras in total, there’s a lot of versatility, which is only then helped by the feature-rich app. The camera system as a whole seems pretty good, but – and I can’t believe I’m saying this – it feels like we’re going backwards from the x2 pro. The images that the x50 pro/5 ji takes are okay in good conditions, meaning overcast with soft lighting. It even manages to get the colors of drury britain right, but, and there is a but in brighter conditions where more dynamic range is needed, things don’t go so well.

The shadows are almost instantly crushed as the phone exposes for the brighter parts of the scene, and so you lose quite a bit of detail. There seems to be too much contrast too much noise reduction and too much noise. Finally, enough broomies website tells us that this phone could do 20 times. Hybrid zoom.

Keep that in mind and now look at these five times. Zoom photos it’s doing some radical sharpening in post, which results in these almost cartoon. Like photos, flipped me over to the front you’d hope that things would get better, but no I mean there is detail there, at least with the main sensor and portrait mode. Isn’T half bad, but dynamic range is shocking.

These photos were taken on a heavily overcast day in my garden and look how blown out the sky in the side of the houses switching to the ultra wide results in more noise, more noise reduction and somehow worse, dynamic range, but the benefit of a wider field. Of view, overall, I’m not impressed with this camera system, but it is something that seems to be able to be fixed in software. The hardware should be on paper enough to create some pretty decent images and I’ve seen how far Romy’s UI has come on in just the past 6 months, and that makes me positive that they should be able to fix this camera problem in software alone. In the next 6 months, and once they do, that, oneplus really needs to up its game right now, though, with the newer lifted pricing – it’s just not quite there for enough to 750 euro device, and that’s my review of the x50 pro 5g, a flagship killer in Every aspect other than the camera, let us know what you thought of this review in the comment section below. Please do check out the full written article in the description and like and subscribe boss down there. Never miss video like this one.

I’Ve been Ryan Thomas with agile Authority and I’ll see you later. Peace .