If you activate the DC dimming mode, you get a constant 90 Hz. Above 46% of the panel brightness, we can only measure the refresh rate at 90 Hz. At minimum display brightness, the period is very unsteady and flickers between 180 and 801 Hz. If the highest value is selected, the system still works with 90 Hz, and the 120 Hz is only enabled in games.Īs with all OLEDs, the RedMagic 7S Pro's also flickers. The refresh rate is specified by the manufacturer with up to 120 Hz and can be fixed to either 60, 90 or 120 Hz in the settings. This is sufficient for an appealing display of HDR content, but the RedMagic 7S Pro only supports HLG and HDR10. With an even distribution of bright and dark areas (APL18), up to 811 cd/m² are achieved. The brightness averages 627 cd/m² with the ambient light sensor enabled a maximum of 464 cd/m² is possible with manual control. The AMOLED display is just as big as in the RedMagic 7, but it is not quite as bright and only works with up to 120 Hz. ![]() Face recognition via the front-facing camera is additionally or alternatively available. Furthermore, a pulse measurement can also be performed via this. It unlocks the RedMagic very quickly and has reliable recognition rates. We rather expect irregular security patches and a maximum of one major upgrade.Īn optical fingerprint sensor in the display is available for biometric security. The manufacturer does not make any concrete statements about the supply of updates. Despite an interim update, the security patches are just up to June 1, 2022, and thus no longer up-to-date. Apart from the Google apps, Nubia does not install third-party applications. Google Android 12 with the RedMagic OS 5.5 user interface is used as the operating system. Features like VoLTE and Wi-Fi calls are supported. ![]() The speaker also reverberates audibly and the microphone range is short. The suppression of ambient noise is rather mediocre. When held to the ear, it is okay, but could be a bit clearer. For accessing the mobile data network, the RedMagic offers a solid configuration including 5G Sub6, which supports all important bands for Europe. The RedMagic 7S Pro nominally supports Wi-Fi 6E, but it did not want to find the 6 GHz network in combination with our reference router Asus Rapture GT-AXE11000, and the transmission rates on the 5 GHz frequency are very slow for Wi-Fi 6. The control of the rear LEDs is also found here. The increased sampling rate of 960 Hz has to be enabled in the settings first, otherwise the touchscreen only works with 480 Hz. The slide button on the opposite side puts the smartphone into a gaming mode with its own interface, via which games can be accessed directly and settings can be adjusted individually. The sensor keys of the RedMagic smartphone can be felt easily and are a useful addition to the game controls. ![]() The material feel is also decent, only the keys have a bit of play, which spoils the good impression a bit. The smartphone's build quality is really good. Supernova (949 Euros) is identical to Mercury in terms of features, but has a bright, grayish design. Mercury (949 Euros/~$950) looks very similar, but offers a small window on the illuminated fan and a generous 18 GB of RAM and 512 GB of internal storage. The cheapest Obsidian model (779 Euros/~$780, our review sample) offers a slightly reduced configuration and does not have a visible LED fan. The three variants differ both visually and in terms of memory configuration. The Nubia RedMagic 7S Pro is available in three designs: Obsidian, Supernova and Mercury.
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