Hello welcome to random, take info, and today we're talking about the Nubia red, magic, 6 and 6 pro. So, if I accidentally say something like in the singular, instead of the plural, while I'm talking about both these phones just know, everything I say does apply to both phones, unless I say other ones. Both of these phones have everything you would expect from a modern day. Gaming phone, including huge bright screens with high refresh rates and high touch sampling rates, big high capacity, fast charging batteries top of the line, specs shoulder triggers and really crazy cooling systems. Speaking of cool, it would be really cool if you gave me a thumbs up and sub to the channel. That was amazing.
What really sets these phones, apart from their competitors, is price. The base model of this phone is only 599 USD, and the pro model is only 699 USD and, what's even cooler is both of these phones are actually being sold and shipped to the US. You can actually buy them right off of Nubia's own website and on Nubia's website they claim the phone can be returned for any reason. If you're not satisfied, so if the phone winds up not working on your carrier, you should be able to return it for a full refund, which makes this a pretty low risk proposition. Now, as far as whether these phones will work in the US, there are two things required for a phone to get guaranteed good coverage here in the states.
The first thing is certifications. A phone must be certified on your carrier's network in order to be guaranteed that it will work properly across all 4g and 5g frequency bands and to even make sure they will activate your phone. The other factor is hardware: does the phone have the antennas and the hardware necessary to utilize the frequency bands that we use here in the US? So on the certification front, these phones are not expected to receive certification from any of the major us carriers. So there is a chance that when the phone comes over here that you won't be able to activate it on your carrier, and even if you do, it may not get very good coverage, even if it has the hardware to support the frequency bands. Your carrier uses so just a word of warning, regardless of what I say about the frequency bands.
These phones may not work very well now. As far as the frequency bands go on the major carriers on Verizon things, aren't good you're not going to get any 5g at all and on 4g it's missing Verizon's big band 13, so your 4g coverage probably isn't going to be that reliable. If you're on a t, the news is a little more rosy you're, still not going to get any 5g, but in 4g it does utilize six out of the seven 4g bands that ATT is really using right now, including all of their major frequency bands. So you can get ATT to activate this phone there's a good chance. You will get some decent 4g coverage with it.
Finally, T-Mobile is probably your best bet at getting this phone to work over here. It does utilize their mid-band 5g frequency band, so you may get some mid-band 5g with this phone. It also uses five out of six of their 4g bands, including all of their major 4g frequency bands. So if you can get T-Mobile to activate this phone for you there's a very good chance, you will get a little of 5g coverage and get some pretty good, 4g coverage. So, at the end of the day, the news with this phone isn't entirely terrible if you're on a t or T-Mobile, and you can get them to activate the phone.
The phone actually may work pretty well over here, at least with 4g, and even if it doesn't, you should be able to return the phone, so it's a lower risk proposition than bringing over some other gaming phones like the black shark 4 or even the ROG foam 5 right now, which isn't currently being sold here in the states. So what are your thoughts about the Nubia red magic? Six? Is this something you're thinking about buying and bringing over here to the states? And if you do, please come back to the channel and leave a comment. Let us know what carrier you have and whether the phone worked here for you, so other people can make smarter buying decisions. That's all the information I have for today. As always, I hope you found the video useful thanks for watching and until next time this is randotechinfo signing out.
Source : RandoTechInfo