New Realme device appears online, could be imminent Realme 3 Pro

realme-3-pro-redmi-7-pro-840x472
RealMe

We’ve recognized for over a month now that the Realme 3 Pro is coming, gratitude to the brand’s own confirmation. Now, we may have established some key details via the Bluetooth SIG website.

The website has listed a Realme smartphone with model number RMX1851. By assessment, the standard Realme 3 has the model numbers RMX1821 and RMX1825. But the listing gives us more than now a model number to go on…

The supposed Realme 3 Pro is packing a 6.3-inch full HD screen, 3,960mAh battery, fingerprint scanner, ColorOS 6.0, and an octa-core 2.208Ghz Snapdragon chipset.

In the case of the processor, a swift Google search for “2.208Ghz Snapdragon” yields unofficial references to the Snapdragon 710 chipset. But there are other Snapdragon chips that top out at 2.2Ghz too, explicitly the Snapdragon 660 and 730 series.

The Realme 3 Pro is planned to launch on April 22, so we’ll recognize for sure whether this listing is indeed the genuine deal then. But for now, it seems like we’re looking at something a little more influential than the standard Realme 3.

Realme has however exposed a few Realme 3 Pro features via its Twitter account, such as marvelous slow-mo support, and Hyper Boost tech for smoother gaming. Here’s hoping the device isn’t an incremental improvement like the Realme 3 was compared to its predecessor. What are you expecting from the Pro model? Let us know in the comments!

Realme 3: Yet another budget-friendly phone with extremely decent specs

Realme 3: Yet another budget-friendly phone with extremely decent specs
RealMe3

This is the real Realme. The OPPO sub-brand Realme has newly released the latest flagship phone. It’s a follow-up to the Realme 2 and Realme 2 Pro from the previous year. It’s now listed on its official website with a price tag that reads ₹8,999 which is about $127 in the US. That is one reasonable device with specs that will make an impact on the ordinary mobile consumers with its big battery capacity of 4230mAh, spacious 6.22-inch dewdrop screen, and the 13MP double + 2MP Nightscape cameras.

Realme 3 is a budget-friendly smartphone but you don’t think is if you appear at the specs list: Helio P70 AI processor, 13MP selfie camera, ColorOS 6.0 on top of Android 9 Pie, and a gradient unibody design. The device shell alone is a prospect to behold because of the starry surface with a magical chameleon effect which looks more like an advanced galaxy gradient.

Aside from the unibody design, the phone offers an extra comfortable grip. When it comes to imaging, the 13+2MP Dual Camera with f/1.8 aperture is decent sufficient. It offers Nightscape for blur-free shots even in low-light environments while the Chroma Boost for additional vivid colors.

There’s the common camera features like AI Scene Recognition, Google Lens, Slo-Mo Video, and Camera API2. The 13MP selfie camera seems to be powerful for selfie lovers. The similar selfie cam allows Face Unlock, DIY Beautify, and AI Beauty.

Realme has implemented an Helio P70 processor so it can be fast. The device previously runs on ColorOS 6.0 based on Android Pie.

Realme 3 leaked, may launch in first quarter of 2019

A leaked teaser video hints at the launch of Realme 3 in the coming days

The previous month, indianexpress.com reported that Realme was working on the latest smartphone which will be launched as Realme 3 in the first quarter of 2019. Now, a leaked video first accessed by BGR India reveals that the Realme 3 will launch in India shortly.

The leaked video is a sample of the original Realme 3 teaser which shows Madhav Sheth, the CEO of Realme dancing with a performer in full hip hop style. The teaser might be stimulated from the hip hop scene from Ranbir Singh starrer Gully Boy.

While not much has been exposed in the leaked video, the name Realme 3 is obviously audible. Back in January indianexpress.com had quoted Realme India CEO Madhav Sheth as saying that Realme 3 phone would be announced at several points in the first-quarter of 2019. But the CEO had not revealed any other information about the phone’s price and specifications, or how the company would try and distinguish the experience from the innovative Realme 2.

Sheth also made it apparent that Realme does not see any value in launching smartphones with a “punch-hole” screen or triple cameras.

As of now, Realme has five phones under its belt– Realme 1, Realme 2, Realme 2 Pro, Realme C1, and Realme U1. As the name suggests, Realme 3 will be a successor of Realme 1 and Realme 2, which were launched previous year. Realme 3 is anticipated to bring in superior specifications and features in contrast to Realme 2.

Realme 2 arrives with a diamond-cutting design at the back and a 6.2-inch notched display at the frontage with 1520 X 720 resolution, 88.8 percent screen to body ratio and 19:9 aspect ratio. The device is powered by Qualcomm Snapdragon 450 processor clubbed with 3GB/4GB RAM with 32GB/64GB internal storage space.

Realme sports 13MP + 2MP double camera at the back and an 8 MP selfie camera at the front. It’s also has a back-mounted fingerprint sensor and face unlock feature. Realme 2 is backed by a 4230 mAh battery.

OPPO tagged Realme U1 as India’s SelfiePro

Real Me U1

OPPO isn’t stopping with coming up with mid-range devices that can offer almost premium presentation. Realme is a new line from the brand that caters to the younger generation that needs and wants more selfie-focused smartphones. You can say this is faultless for the millennials (at least most of them) who like to show off to the world all the faultless selfies they can capture. The company has previously introduced to us the Realme 1, Realme 2, Realme 2 Pro, and the Realme C1 and here’s another one: the Reame U1.

The Realme U1 boasts a 25MP front-facing camera with an IMX576 sensor, placed within the teardrop notch. Oppo has implemented the notch design once again to allow a greater screen real estate. The camera is said to achieve well even in low-light environments.

The Realme 2 Pro’s screen is really applied here. There’s a large 6.3-inch IPS LCD panel with 1080 x 2340-pixel resolution. The screen is nearly bezel-less (2.05mm top and 1.7mm both sides) with the display covering about 90.8% of the front.

Other specs comprise Helio P70 processor, dual 13 and 2MP rear cameras, Mali-G72 MP3 GPU, 3GB or 4GB of RAM, 32GB or 64GB onboard storage, microSD card slot for development, dual nano-SIM slot, 3.5mm headphone jack, n FM radio receiver, dual VoLTE, and a 3500mAh battery.

OPPO used a 2.5D Gorilla Glass 3 in the front. The back seems to be glass but it’s only acrylic topped by a special coating. It’s better because it doesn’t smash easily compared to glass.

The OPPO Realme U1 can be careful a gaming phone with its gaming optimizations that contains stable 60fps. The phone runs on Color OS 5.2 which is previously based on Android 8.1 Oreo.

The device is obtainable in India so the ORoaming app is supported. Pricing starts at INR11,999 ($170) for the 3GB RAM/32GB model. The 4/64GB model is INR14,999 ($215).

You can select from these colors: Fiery Gold, Brave Blue, and Ambitious Black. December 5 will be the market release date.

Realme 2 review : Something good , Something Not

It’s only been around three months since the Realme 1, and yet here we are through the Realme 2 — an iterative update to an extremely affordable device, bringing some extra features without inflating the price much. However, for each step forward, the phone takes an additional step back. This device removes as various features as it adds!

Realme has now broken absent to become its own brand. For its entrance it kept the price the exact same as the previous model, thus requiring more compromises for a phone previously all about compromise. Let’s take a look at the $130 handset in this Realme 2 review and see what just is going on here.

Realme 2 Design

Realme-1-and-Realme-2-840x472

The very plasticky build and the interesting polygonal consequence adorning the rear of the phone have continued the same. I said in my Realme 1 review this looked much improved in photos than in person, and this time around the consequence seems even understated. Every now and then it catches the light and carries out the pattern, but most of the time it looks like a glossy black finish. It’s certainly not a killer design feature, but on an otherwise unremarkable, cheap phone, it’s still a welcome presence.

Realme 2 lighting effect

The branding around the rear is now a little less affected (a big win), and there are a dual-lens camera and a fingerprint sensor.

Another exciting design choice this around is the presence of a notch. Many of you just clenched interpretation that, but I actually quite like it (interestingly, this feature appeared to have been cut last minute from the first Realme based on early renders).

Realme 2 notch

Realme-2-Selfie-Camera-840x472
It’s not that I like notches — I’m not truly a big fan — but a notch can make a phone look a little more 2018. Cheap phones don’t frequently get to have modern design features, so having a notch here just makes the phone look and feel a little less like a cooperation. It’s interesting to see a notch on a phone this inexpensive, basically.

However, there is one more very big concession here in the form of a lower-res screen. The Realme 2 derives with a 720 x 1,520 screen. This isn’t hugely obvious until you put it next to a device with a high-pitched screen (especially a punchy AMOLED). That’s when you actually notice the difference and even the white’s appearance murkier than last time around. If you lean in nearby, you can even see separate pixels.

Realme 2 media consumption

Obviously, this isn’t actually a media ingesting device. It can consume media (nom nom) but the lack of acuity combined with a very sub-par single speaker mean it’s not mainly good at it. This really doesn’t sound good when you original it up. You surely won’t want to listen to much Spotify without by means of the headphone jack (which is thankfully present and correct).

The rest of the time it’s fine — the Nintendo key is 720p after all and most people don’t have a problem with it. It just doesn’t make a ton of sense to increase the size of the display to 6.2 inches and hit an 80.85 percent screen-to-body ratio through the notch, only to then make the screen actually less sharp.

Realme 2 screen

Realme-2-Front-840x472

The phone’s design is still actual clearly cutting corners to save money. The plastic build is actually noticeable, and the seam running around the side is even inferior. The keys are both oddly placed and mushy. Separate volume buttons continuously give me the heebie-jeebies.

I wouldn’t imagine a water-resistant, unibody, glass, and metal structure at this price. For what you’re paying, this is about as decent as it gets. I’m just letting you know what to expect.

Realme 2 performance and software

realme 2 front
The design got a bit of an advancement, but the internals has truly taken a small step backward.

We’ve gone from a MediaTek to a Snapdragon, which you would usually imagine being a good thing. Unfortunately, it’s the rather underpowered Snapdragon 450.

The original Realme 1 was not precisely a rapidity demon, but for day-to-day use, you could generally get by. It would even be good for a moment of light gaming. This time around imagine things to chug a little. You’ll understand the odd impediment as you navigate with the browser. Apps take an extended time to open. 3D games will involvement skipped frames and occasional slow-down. You can still play something like Asphalt 8, but you’re going to involve a fair few stutters on low settings. The Adreno 506 does okay with 2D games, however, but don’t get this for gaming!

AnTuTu benchmark scores weren’t decent. The Realme 2 only beaten 20 percent of users, compared with the 38 percent achieved by the Realme 1.

Realme 2 benchmarks

Realme-2-Benchmarks-840x472

I found performance meaningfully improved than the Honor 7S sporting the MediaTek MT6739 processor. That phone was just… urgh.

This is a handy phone, it’s just not countless. That’s a big shame seeing the Realme 1 was really better than I anticipated. This device wreaks of missed opportunities.

What’s unfortunately not helping substances either is the software, which is everyone’s favorite Color OS. I’m sure it’s really someone’s favorite anywhere, but it sure isn’t mine. There are worse offenders out there in the bloat subdivision, but it felt like I was constantly aggressive against this UI. Being unable to dismiss announcements before they’re prepared to leave of their own accord is simply obnoxious, and finding out how to alteration the default launcher took lengthier than it should (thankfully it’s doable though). Why are so many dialogues boxes lime green on white? Who perhaps thinks that’s a good color scheme?!

Realme 2 home screen

I’m challenging the 3GB/32GB model, but you can also become 4GB/32GB and 4GB/64GB. None of these configurations is everything to write home about, but they’re all flawlessly serviceable and RAM organization hasn’t been a bottleneck for me.

Perhaps the most imposing aspect of this phone from a hardware viewpoint is the battery. At 4,230mAh, that is an important upgrade over the Realme 1’s 3,410mAh, and also a whopping great battery by any standards. Combined with the low-res screen, the battery has eccentric staying power and will effortlessly see you through a day of even heavy use. Honestly, this is among the best permanency you will get from any phone. It’s a convincing backup for portable and the like when you factor in the cost as well.

Realme 2 camera and features

Realme-1-Camera-App-840x472
While the Realme 2 takes some astonishing steps backward in some divisions, the camera is essentially a bit nicer. The dual lens camera associations a 13MP f2.2 lens with a 2MP secondary depth sensor for bokeh. Around the forward-facing is an 8MP selfie lens, which is also talented of portrait effects, despite losing the NPU found in the Helio P60 from the Realme 1.

The only change here is the subordinate lens, which seemingly should only come into play with depth consequence shots. However, it felt like the shots I achieved with this camera were slightly superior. Perhaps the second lens lets in a bit lighter? Maybe it permits for better post-processing. Perhaps it’s a software apprise. Whatever the case, photos seemed a little more contrast to me. The inventive camera was never that bad assumed the price anyway.

Obviously, this is no Pixel or Galaxy. Irregularly I found images to observed a little blurry due to the lack of steadying. Colors are washed out. It falls apart in even somewhat lower light (with lots of noise), and background detail gets lost in a lot of pictures too. However, it still achieves perhaps healthier than you might imagine overall. There are even a couple of fun choices like AR and time-lapse in the app.

Other features here all work fine too. The fingerprint sensor is actually fast, and the face unlocking is actually good — better than even some much more luxurious implementations. The fingerprint sensor is really worth mentioning because the Realme 1 lacked the feature. With face unlock not quite secure sufficient for things like PayPal, this was actually a thoughtful omission.

Realme 2 review: Closing comments

realme_2_1535979599067
I’m in a weird situation. I still think Realme is offering a countless value phone here. It definitely leaps and limits better than the Honor 7S. I’m less sure whether this is improved than the Realme 1. While the subordinate lens is nice, the only tangible benefit you get from that is bokeh — something the Realme 1 previously did. The bigger screen is cool too, but it’s lower determination and notch mean it isn’t really an unqualified win.

Really the fingerprint sensor and the battery life enhancements are the two really exclusively positive enhancements here, though the Realme 1 had no difficulties in the battery department nevertheless. It feels like two steps forward and at slightest two steps back, especially considering the same cheap design and use of MicroUSB. It’s so strange this self-proclaimed “successor” would force you to make so negotiations to get those new features.

If it had just reserved the precise same internals and screen as last time, this would have remained a really compelling expedient for the price assortment. As it is, it’s a bit of a curiosity.

Those of us with less expenditure power at least deserve upgrades to still truly upgrade our phones

I get it’s a cheap phone, but those of us with less expenditure power still need upgrades that actually upgrade our phones, right?

If you have $100-$150 to spend, then a Realme phone is a decent selection. Which one you pick is a tougher question, and really be contingent on what you value.