Now, having reviewed the Realme seven, it's now time to turn our attention to the more premium model in the series. The Realme seven pro now. This phone is the successor to the Realme six pro, and it does boast of some big upgrades. Now the most notable ones include the use of an AMOLED display, stereo speakers and 65 watt fast charging, which all sound pretty impressive. The Redmi 7 pro is priced at 19, 999 rupees and at this price it competes with phones such as the Poco x2 and the Redmi Note 9 pro max. If you look at the higher variant of the 7 pro, it could also compete with phones such as the Redmi k20 and even the recently launched Oppo f17 pro.
But is this really worth your money? It's time to find out hi, I'm hoyden, and you're watching gadget360, and this is my review of the realm 7 pro now before we go ahead, don't forget to subscribe to our channel and also hit that bell icon, so you're the first to know. Whenever we have a new video, the realm 7 pro features the same mirror split design on its back as a Realme seven. But it's a lot, slimmer and lighter. This makes it a lot more comfortable to hold and use the frame, and the back panel are still made of plastic, but the quality is very good, and the phone feels sturdy overall. The matte finish for the back means it doesn't pick up fingerprints easily and the mirror blue unit that I have looks good.
The first big feature to note is the display it's slightly smaller, compared to the one on the 6 pro at 6.4 inches. But it's a super AMOLED panel with a full HD plus resolution and corning gorilla glass. The super AMOLED display is bright and colors are rich, it's great for watching videos, and this experience was enhanced by the stereo speakers. The stereo effect is good, as the earpiece gets almost as loud as a bottom firing. Speaker and Dolby Atmos helps boost the volume and audio fatality.
The Realme 7 pro has an always on display mode and an in-display fingerprint sensor. Fingerprint unlock worked well in my experience and face recognition was equally quick. Now, sadly, this phone ditches one big feature from the Realme 6 pro and that's a high refresh rate display. That's right. The Realme 7 pro has to make do with just a 60 hertz display, which is a little disappointing.
Now, don't get me wrong. I wouldn't really call this a dealbreaker, but if you consider the Realme 6 pro, which had a 90 hertz panel and even this year's realm 7, which also has a 90hz panel, the 7 pro just feels a little incomplete. There's no hdr10 certification either, which is a big bummer. Considering lower priced phones such as the Motorola one, fusion plus do offer this. The realm 7 pro performed well in the time I spent with it, and I'm not surprised as it features the same Qualcomm snapdragon 720g as the 6 pro.
It's still a good chip as its power efficient and doesn't heat up much, even when stressed now, both variants of the Realme 7 pro have 128gb of storage, with the only difference being 6gb and 8gb of ram realm UI ran pretty smoothly on the top end variant that I had the phone never missed a beat whether it was launching an app or switching between multiple apps or even playing a heavy game. Speaking of games, they ran pretty well too colorful. Titles such as super clone looked great and even heavier ones such as battle prime ran smoothly at the highest in-game quality settings. There's a 4500mah battery in the Realme 7 pro, which, on average easily lasted for more than a day on one charge. RHD video loop test also showed promising results with the phone lasting a little over 22 hours.
Now it takes barely any time to fully charge it too, thanks to the 65 watt fast charging adapter. Now, in my test, the 7 pro's battery charged up to 87 percent in half an hour and took roughly 10 more minutes or so to reach about 100 percent. The rear cameras on the Realme 7 pro are similar to those of the realm 7. These are a 64 megapixel, Sony, mix, 682, main camera, an 8 megapixel, ultra-wide angle, camera a 2, megapixel depth, camera and a 2 megapixel macro camera now for selfies, there's a single 32 megapixel camera, with a rather narrow, f 2.5 aperture. Now compared to the Realme 6 pro, the Realme 7 pro misses out on the ultra-wide angle, selfie camera and even a rear, telephoto camera.
Now, according to real me, the new 64 megapixel rear sensor on the 7 pro should be able to give you similar, if not better clarity than using a 2x optical zoom camera. So let's put this to the test against realm's own 6 pro now, in the first shot, we focused on a rather large object at a distance. If we zoom in here to examine both photos. The realm 7 pro produced very similar details compared to the photo taken using the telephoto camera on the 6 pro now using 2x digital zoom on the 7 pro the results were pretty decent, but the 6 pro telephoto camera did still produce slightly better details and a smoother depth of field. However, the differences were very minor.
The bottom line is, if you want to take good zoomed in shots with the 7 pro, it's best to shoot a 64 megapixel photo and then magnify and crop it later. Regular photos taken in daylight, generally looked good, HDR was handled well, details were good and colors look natural. The same was true for close-ups as well, which had a smooth natural background blur the ultra-wide angle, camera didn't produce the best details and in daylight I did notice some very apparent chromatic aberration in landscape shots portrait, shots were handled well with good edge detection and pleasing background blur. The macro camera was all right, and it could produce some decent images. If I was steady enough, low light photos were decent without much visible grain and details were fairly good, even in darker regions.
Now you can, of course, brighten things up by using night mode, which makes a big difference. The front camera captured detailed selfies during the day portrait mode also worked pretty well. The selfie camera's HDR capabilities were equally impressive, and it managed to properly expose brightly lit backgrounds without losing detail on our subject's face selfies taken indoors and under good artificial light. Also looked good. The Realme 7 can record videos at up to 4k 30 fps with electronic stabilization, and the quality is pretty decent and there's only a mild shimmer.
Due to the stabilization when you move about the ultra steady mode helps fix this, but keep in mind that it heavily crops the frame and the quality is also a bit lower videos shot in low light, don't look very good with relatively poor details and visible grain. However, realm has added an ultra night mode for video which bumps up the exposure. This can make a big difference when trying to capture footage in dark environments. All things considered, I think realm has done a fairly good job in crafting the Realme 7 pro. It brings some meaningful upgrades to the Realme 6 pro in the form of an AMOLED display, stereo speakers and much faster charging.
Now the primary rear camera has improved a bit too thanks to the new sensor. But overall, I think all the cameras in general could still do better in low light. I'm not sure if ditching the ultra-wide angle, selfie camera was the best move as unlike a depth camera, it could actually be pretty useful. Now, looking at the competition, I don't think the realm 7 pro is a clear-cut winner. Take, for example, the Motorola one fusion plus, which at a lower price offers features such as a hdr10 plus display you get a pop-up, selfie camera and, of course, a slightly faster soc.
Now, keep in mind that the Poco x3 and the Samsung Galaxy m51 are also two pretty exciting phones that should be launching soon. So, if you aren't in any hurry to upgrade, perhaps waiting for a bit longer wouldn't be such a bad thing. So that's it for my review of the realm 7 pro. Let me know what you think about this phone in the comments below and as always for all things, tech log on to gadget360. com.
Source : Gadgets 360