Throughout the years, Infinix’s NOTE line has been known as THE bang for the buck series of smartphones.
After a year, they’ve gone all out with the new NOTE 50 line.
Aside from the spec-studded NOTE 50 Pro+, there’s also a non-5G Infinix NOTE 50 Pro gleaming on the horizon.
Pure mature
Some may dislike it, but I fully embrace this bold design change.

This is an appearance maturity. The new unconventional camera bump with squircular lenses makes it oddly attractive — at least in my eyes.

That’s in contrast to their past releases with conventional rectangular-shaped bumps alongside circular cutouts.

Last year’s NOTE 40 Pro isn’t an exception as I found that one pretty lame and tame-looking.

Infinix NOTE 40 Pro | 2024
According to Infinix’s press release, the new camera design is inspired by a car’s front grille. The inner car geek in me instantly saw resemblances to the BMW M4 and i4.

Good thing or not, this design runs in all NOTE 50 devices — regardless if it’s the base, S, or Pro+ variant.
Realistically speaking, there’s clearly no way to tell which is which unless you rock the very specific Mountain Shade or Marine Blue colorways of the base NOTE 50 and NOTE 50s respectively.

Racing Edition’s first show on the MWC ’25 show floor
The Enchanted Purple I rock and the Racing Edition I desire are reserved for the duo Pro siblings.
Meanwhile, Ruby Red is limited to the base and S models.
| Note 50 | Note 50s | Note 50 Pro | Note 50 Pro+ |
| Titanium Grey | Titanium Grey | Titanium Grey | Titanium Grey |
| Ruby Red | Ruby Red | Enchanted Purple | Enchanted Purple |
| Mountain Shade | Marine Blue | Racing Edition | Racing Edition |
| Shadow Black | Shadow Black |

To make it even harder to distinguish, all phones in the series also feature Infinix’s ArmorAlloy design.
ICYMI, it’s a combination of Damascus Steel alongside Aerospace-Grade Aluminum for all-around durability.

Speaking of, the NOTE 50 Pro also has an improved IP64 rating over last year’s IP53.

Another way to differentiate? Its beefier brother (literally and figuratively) has a 209g heft.
The NOTE 50 Pro, despite its “Pro” monicker, is 11g lighter at 198g. That’s due to its plastic back incorporation — which I assume cuts down costs.

Infinix has also managed to make the NOTE 50 Pro very slim at just 7.32mm — which is around 1mm thinner than its predecessor.
Surprisingly slim
With slimness in mind, the display bezels of the NOTE 50 Pro are also surprisingly narrow.

It’s a surprise for a device with this price. Most smartphones in the budget segment wouldn’t dare to make this move — but Infinix has made it possible.

It boasts a 6.78-inch AMOLED flat display with an impressive 93.4% StB (Screen-to-Body) ratio. Even though it’s not equal in all four sides, the fact that they’ve reduced even the chin area is already an accomplishment.

On top of that, the successor is even a lot smoother with its 144Hz refresh rate.
If you’re worried about color accuracy, it has 100% DCI-P3 wide color gamut. Colors pop regardless of the content you try to consume.

Whenever used outdoors, it can sustain around 1300 nits of peak brightness — just not too direct in a very harsh sun.
For biometrics, it uses an optical in-display fingerprint sensor which does the job right — as long as your fingers are dry and firmly press on it.

Concerned about audio quality? Well, the NOTE 50 Pro boasts a stereo-speaker setup with speaker grilles found on top and bottom.
To make it “better”, they’ve partnered up with JBL in tuning up the audio segment not just of this phone, but of the full NOTE 50 line.

Honestly speaking, despite its partnership with a renowned audio brand, sound is okay.

Playing music or any content through its loudspeakers would fill in some of the void. But as expected, it lacks that deep bass and overall richness to fully immerse you with whatever you’re playing.
Never groundbreaking
With a lot of powerful chips on the ladder, the MediaTek Helio G100 Ultimate 6nm 8-core SoC found on the Infinix NOTE 50 Pro is never groundbreaking.
But, speaking from my experience, the performance has been dramatically improved over last year’s G99 Ultimate.

Case in point: I was able to test last year’s chipset in my TECNO SPARK 20 Pro+ review. Whenever I turn on the phone, navigate through UI, multitask and switch between apps, or do light gaming, I witness delays and stutters. However, this isn’t the case in this year’s Helio SoC.
As Infinix heavily endorses the NOTE 50 series meant for CoDM (Call of Duty: Mobile), not testing it out would be a huge miss.

Surprisingly, despite running in Medium Graphics Settings, the popular FPS game runs well without hiccups. Turn on Performance Mode through XBoost Gaming Engine, you get an even smoother gameplay.

MOBA games such as Pokémon Unite, Mobile Legends: Bang Bang, League of Legends: Wild Rift, and Honor of Kings should run seamlessly as they aren’t too demanding (and daunting).

Ace Racer also suprisingly runs well with High graphics, Medium Frame Rate, and even Anti-Aliasing turned on.

But for hardcore games by HoYoverse such as Zenless Zone Zero, Honkai: Star Rail, and Genshin Impact, expect a degraded performance even with software-based game boosting.

Buyers can choose between 8 or 12GB of LPDDR4x RAM with memory extension support through the use of internal storage.
Albeit, storage is preciously limited to just 256GB with a sub-standard UFS 2.2 interface.

Personally, the biggest downside that matters is the lack of 5G support as I value up/download speeds whenever I bring a phone out and about for outdoor-based work.
But, if the areas you go to don’t cover 5G connectivity, 4G LTE (or 4.5G LTE-A) would be enough for your internet needs.
Wi-Fi networks in 5GHz are supported, BTW. Other budget-centric phones fail to do so with CPU limitations.
Superb speeds
The battery of the Infinix NOTE 50 Pro has been bumped up to 5200mAh this year. That’s 200mAh compared to last year.

With a less-demanding chipset and a power-efficient display, the phone can last throughout the day along moderate use.
As one would assume, standby time will be longer if you have lesser screen on-time.

If in case your battery gets depleted in the middle of a busy day, there’s an improved 90W FastCharge 3.0 support.

Fortunately, the charger and cable are still bundled in the box.
That doesn’t stop there! Infinix also provides an optional add-on: a 20W MagPad wireless charging pad.

Although the NOTE 50 Pro isn’t Qi2-certified as it doesn’t have magnet coils in its chassis, it’s still possible to maximize Infinix’s magnetic charging protocol by putting its supplied case with magnets in it.

Infinix 90W FastCharge Wired Adapter |
Infinix 20W MagPad Wireless Charging Pad |
|
START TIME from 0% |
10:12PM |
10:20PM |
3 minutes |
8% |
1% |
5 minutes |
12% |
5% |
10 minutes |
22% |
9% |
15 minutes |
31% |
14% |
30 minutes |
39% |
25% |
45 minutes |
82% |
36% |
50 minutes |
93% |
39% |
1 hour |
— |
47% |
1 hour 30 minutes |
— |
67% |
2 hours |
— |
88% |
2 hours 10 minutes |
— |
96% |
END TIME to 100% |
11:10PM
|
12:36AM
|
In my GadgetMatch Charge Test, despite the claims of a full charge in just 38 minutes, I was able to fully top-up the NOTE 50 Pro in almost an hour using its bundled wired charger.
On the other hand, charging it through Infinix’s proprietary wireless charger consumes two hours — which is ideal for overnight charging.
Ideal imaging
Infinix has cut the cycle and departed from having a lone 108MP camera two generations in a row.
This time, the new NOTE 50 Pro packs an essential duo combo setup — including an ultra-wide lens that’s been absent in the NOTE Pro line of the past.
Wide |
50MP f/1.88
|
Ultra-Wide |
8MP f/2.2
|
Selfie |
32MP f/2.289º FoV |

While the megapixel count seems like a downgrade, this year’s 50MP main shooter is based on Samsung’s ISOCELL GN5 — an image sensor used in the base models of the Galaxy S22 and S23 line, as well as most iQOO flagships from the 9/9 Pro, 9T, even the 11.

For the most part, the main 1x lens can shoot decent shots.


Ultra-Wide Angle (UWA) shots also look good from the get-go.


That being said, I enjoyed shooting a lot of 2x snaps more than the regular and even wider focal length choices.
Whether it’s taking #foodporn photos…

Street snaps…

… even in dreamy scenery shots, this lossless zoom would more than suffice.






The absence of a dedicated 2x shooter didn’t feel like the NOTE 50 Pro’s camera system is incomplete when its main sensor can fill in the work — at least in desirable shooting scenarios.


That in-sensor cropped zooming can even take these cool closeups of these flowers…


Even so, it shows creamier DoF (Depth of Field) in contrast to using Macro mode — which is admittedly useless with what it captured.

1x Macro Mode ON / OFF vs 2x Zoom
In instances where there’s a pure absence of light, don’t forget to use Night Mode to avoid image noise in the dark.

Night Mode OFF vs ON | 1x Wide

Night Mode OFF vs ON | 2x Zoom
So you won’t miss cleaner low-light samples that are social media-ready.

Plagued by some flaws
The cameras of the NOTE 50 Pro are far from being perfect.
While there are some things that can be remedied through proper framing, shooting, and even post-processing, it’s sometimes the software that totally ruins the experience.
1. Quality incosistency
This is apparent whenever you switch to UWA.

By looking at the details alone, there’s a massive gap.
The 8MP UWA module of the NOTE 50 Pro takes photos that are less clear and more distorted/blurred on the sides. Moreover, it’s just focused on the center area.

2. Color inaccuracy
Switching to 2x Lossless Zoom isn’t an exception.

Sometimes, it’s brighter. More often than not, it’s either very vibrant or just plain muted.

3. Inapt HDR processing
This is a one-time shot I thought would look nice since it looked acceptable in the camera viewfinder.

I just realized how bad its HDR camera algorithm was after reviewing the photos in the gallery.
4. Focusing issues
When I tried shooting this ice cream bun under an intense and very HOT 42ºC afternoon, I just thought tapping the center of the display would result into a well-focused dessert photo regardless if I don’t see the screen clearly.

Then again, after reviewing all the photos, it’s surprising how it took unfocused photos not just once, but TWICE in a row.
Heck, the discrepancy in capturing the right HDR balance acted up again in the second shot.
5. Glare galore
No matter how hard you try to clean the lenses, it’s not enough to eliminate the existence of lens glare.

The next best thing is to just avoid taking photos directly parallel to the sun or just move around and find the best frame without that pesky flaring.
I just hope Infinix could come up with a software update for these camera bugs.
As for the glaring, well, the only thing I could ever hope for is the formulation of a Glare Removal Tool in its built-in AI Editor.
Complimentary Sides
With AI already in the way, it’s NOTEworthy to point out that the NOTE 50 Pro has Infinix’s AI♾️ found within the all-new XOS 15.

For the most part, it consists of AI features already present in other smartphones.
Those include AI Eraser and other AIGC tools such as Image Generator and Sketch to Image.

Double-tapping the power button enables Folax AI.

With the integration of DeepSeek R1, it’s more AI-ntelligent whenever being asked or ordered to do something in-device.

But more than just AI, another side feature I find useful is the incorporation of Bio-Active Halo AI Lighting at its back.

Suddenly, it’s 2014 all over again…
Not only it displays several multi-colored light effects for notifications, charging, summoning Folax, camera timer, and video recording, it also doubles as a sensor for measuring one’s heart rate and SpO2 levels.

Lastly, a feature most brands tend to overlook is the inclusion of an IR blaster — which helps you control multiple appliances at home even without Wi-Fi.
Is the Infinix NOTE 50 Pro your BudgetMatch?
In the Philippines, the Infinix NOTE 50 Pro retails for PhP 11,999.
But, with an early bird pricing of just PhP 9,999 along a host of freebies, it’s a device that rightfully sits below the US$ 200 bench.

Swipe Left if you’re looking for an entry-level phone with a greater camera setup, 5G support, better AI feats, even a dual IP68/69 rating.
Its cousin, the TECNO CAMON 40 Pro 5G, is being sold at PhP 12,999. That’s a price gap of PhP 1,000 (PhP 2,000 more considering their promo pricing).

TECNO CAMON 40 Pro 5G | 2025
On the downside, that smartphone has a smaller 8GB base memory and downgraded 45W charging without wireless charging — that’s obviously been reserved for the Infinix NOTE 50 line.
Infinix also has a bundled tempered glass and headphones that its sister brand decided to remove for good.
Swipe Right if the things aforementioned don’t matter and if you value quick charging speeds, a flat display, and a cheaper price tag overall.

For consumers with budget constraints, PhP 1,000 is already a lot to shell out.
The Infinix NOTE 50 Pro, despite what it lacks, it’s still a very compelling and competitively-priced phone just for everyone to resist.

Although Infinix did skip an older Dimensity chip in favor of a newer Helio SoC, you still get notable performance improvements more than what entry-level 4G smartphones did from the yesteryears.

With its performance prowess, speedy charging and reliable battery, host of upgraded software + AI feats, an overall solid and sturdy phone, and a complete package including a supplied wireless charging pad, it’s simply one of the best budget phones you can buy right now.
The Infinix NOTE 50 Pro rightfully deserves the GadgetMatch Seal of Approval.
I thought I was done with in-ear headphones. Then the Galaxy Buds4 Pro entered my atmosphere.
I was never truly comfortable with in-ear headphones. That’s why I leaned toward over-ear pairs. But I still wanted something compact for days when I wanted a lighter loadout.
Then came the Shokz OpenDots One. A clip-type, open-ear pair that felt like a game changer. It sounded good enough. It kept me aware of my surroundings. I used it to preview reels while out on coverage, while walking around the neighborhood, and even on quick trips to the barber.
I was ready to write off in-ears completely.
Good thing I didn’t.
A surprise I didn’t expect
I went into the Galaxy Buds4 Pro a little skeptical. I already liked the Galaxy Buds3 Pro, but comfort was never its strongest suit for me.
Then I wore the Buds4 Pro.
Right away, it felt different. More comfortable. More natural. I thought it was just new gadget novelty. But even after a week, that feeling didn’t fade.
That’s when it clicked. These are different. They don’t just sound good. They fit into your day better.
Finally looks like its own thing
The first thing I loved? It doesn’t look like AirPods anymore.
The Galaxy Buds3 Pro looked a little too familiar. I didn’t hate it, but it didn’t feel like me. I like using tech that reflects a bit of individuality, and that design always felt a little tacky.
The blade design on the Galaxy Buds4 Pro fixes that.
It looks cool. Straight up.
More importantly, it feels more like Samsung finally finding its design language again instead of borrowing from someone else. It’s not just aesthetic either. The shape makes controls easier to find and use.
It’s a small thing on paper. In practice, it changes how you feel about using it every day.
Controls feel easier too. Pinch to pause/play, slide up/down in the same pinching position if you want to adjust volume. It just works.
Comfort changes everything
This is the biggest upgrade for me.
With the Buds3 Pro, I loved the features but didn’t always enjoy having them in my ears. With the Buds4 Pro, that problem is gone.
It’s not that you don’t feel them at all. You do. But not in a way that makes you want to take them out.
I’ve worn them for four straight hours while working in a café. Writing, replying to emails, just sitting there with music on. No urge to remove them. No fatigue that breaks your flow.
They stay in place, too. Even during brisk walks.
For someone who almost gave up on in-ears entirely, that alone is a massive win.
Rich, full, and now more layered
If you’ve used the Galaxy Buds3 Pro, you already know the sound is good. The Buds4 Pro takes that and pushes it one step higher. Rich, warm, full, and surprisingly layered. The difference hit me immediately.
I was listening to Spotify on the Galaxy S26 Ultra and started hearing details I don’t usually notice. It reminded me of the first time I heard lossless tracks on Apple Music with a really good pair of headphones.
And this is just on Spotify. Hell yeah, it makes Spotify feel good enough.
Hearing the little things
I listen to a mix of K-pop, KRNB, OPM, pop rock, and alternative rock. Across all of it, one thing stood out: separation. It’s easier to isolate sounds if you’re into that.
With TWICE tracks, I started picking up vocal riffs and runs from Jihyo and Nayeon that don’t always stand out on other setups. They’re not overpowering. Not distracting. They just sit there, completing the track.
It feels… intentional. Like everything has its place. It doesn’t just sound better. It makes music you already love feel new again.
A quick reality check
At one point, I forgot to charge the Buds4 Pro and switched to the HONOR Earbuds 4. Same track. Same app. Night and day difference.
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro sounded rich, warm, and full. The HONOR Earbuds 4 felt a few steps behind across the board. To be fair, they’re in different price brackets. But that moment still validated everything I was feeling about the Buds4 Pro.
ANC that gets the job done
Let’s set expectations.
The ANC is not Sony WH-1000XM6 level. But nothing is.
If Sony is an 11/10, this sits comfortably at around an 8.5.
And honestly? That’s more than enough.
On a 12-hour flight from San Francisco back to the Philippines, I had these on almost the entire time. Engine noise was significantly reduced. There’s still a faint hum if you really listen for it, but it never got distracting.
In cafés, even when seated right next to the speaker, it blocks out enough noise for you to stay locked in.
It locks you in. You feel like the music is inside your head while still giving you elite sound, some spatial awareness, and surprising comfort.
That balance matters more than chasing perfection.
Adaptive ANC still needs patience
I default to turning ANC on manually. Adaptive ANC and EQ are there, but in my experience, they take a bit of time to kick in. Sometimes a minute or two.
Because of that, I’ve built the habit of switching modes myself depending on where I am.
It works. It’s reliable. But I’d like to see this feel faster and more seamless over time.
Just fits into your day
This is the kind of device you don’t think about. I reach for it every time I step out. Walks, errands, quick food runs.
It’s perfect when you’re waiting in line and scrolling through reels. No accidental loud audio. No awkward moments. It just fits. That’s probably the best compliment I can give it.
Galaxy ecosystem still wins
Pairing is seamless. Controls are responsive. Everything works the way you expect it to. If you’re using a Galaxy device, this is a no-brainer.
Even outside the ecosystem, it still holds up. But you definitely get the best experience when you stay within it.
What still doesn’t matter (yet)
Features like AI Translate are still in that “nice to have” category for me. They’re promising. They’ll probably get better. But they’re not why you buy this.
You buy this for the sound, the comfort, and the everyday usability. And those are already excellent.
Is the Galaxy Buds4 Pro your GadgetMatch?
If the Galaxy Buds3 Pro was Samsung’s best so far, the Galaxy Buds4 Pro is that — made better. A meaningful refinement.
This is my default recommendation now.
The Galaxy Buds4 Pro is for people who want to get the best sound in a compact, easy-to-carry audio buddy to their smartphones.
If you’re coming from older earbuds, this is an easy upgrade.
If you’re coming from the Buds3 Pro, you can probably hold off — unless comfort and design matter a lot to you.
And if you’re deep in the Galaxy ecosystem?
This Buds4 you. Swipe up. No questions asked.
Gaming
WWE 2K26 lets you live out all the fantasy matches you could want
But you have to play for hours and hours to unlock everyone.
The old SmackDown vs. RAW games were some of the most fun I’ve had as a teenager. Though I didn’t own a PlayStation 2 or 3 then, I had a PlayStation Portable and the series’ corresponding version. Sure, it didn’t have the then-advanced graphics, but the games kept me company for many a day and night. And it all revolved around a simple premise: letting wrestling fans live out their fantasy matches.
Now, with over 400 playable characters on launch, WWE 2K26 hopes to rekindle that magic. Previously, 2K’s take on the wrestling simulator never really captivated me as much as the SvR series did. Though players still had a similarly large roster throughout the years, the series felt too homogenized, too riddled with microtransactions. This year, the series got me thinking again: Can sheer numbers singlehandedly usher a new renaissance for WWE gamers?
The good: Four hundred superstars under one banner
WWE 2K26 touts over four hundred playable characters on launch. With unannounced DLCs still on the horizon, this number will surely balloon further. Even for a dedicated WWE fan, having over four hundred playable characters is insane. Where else can I pit Joe Hendy against Andre the Giant and create my own WrestleMania III moment?
The only catch, however, is that the game did some stat padding to get to this enormous number. Besides having multiple personas for a single wrestler (and CM Punk alone has ten of these), the roster includes a platoon of fictional MyRISE characters, which comes off as distracting if you don’t particularly engage with the MyRISE mode.
Ironically, the game didn’t even need to pad its stats this way. For the first time in the series, the launch roster includes Superstars from the current WWE roster, TNA, AAA, and the Hall of Fame. I could spend hours just feeding a litany of Superstars to TNA legend Abyss. That’s something I could never have done in the old SvR days.
The good: A more fluid fighting system
It also helps that WWE 2K26’s fighting system is the most fluid that the series has been. Wrestlers no longer feel like wooden animatronics skipping from one animation to the next. Each punch flows smoothly into a clothesline, a grapple, a carry, or a finisher.
It is, of course, at the expense of a more complex control scheme where each input combination corresponds to its own move. A stray waggle of the right joystick, for example, can have your wrestler careening towards their opponent in ways you never intended.
It takes some time to get used to. Every time I get a WWE 2K game, I always need a refresher course for the controls. Plus, each entry introduces something different. This year introduces rushing opponents to the corner and carrying opponents in different ways.
Another new addition is the new third-person camera which follows your character, rather than being locked to the ring. To me, this was a welcome feature. The original camera can often betray you by having various elements (other wrestlers, the ring itself) block your view of the action, thus preventing you from reacting correctly to your opponent. The dynamic third-person camera solves this and makes the fight more immersive.
That said, the camera necessarily changes the controls a bit because you need the right joystick to look around. Because of that, I had to revert back to the original camera after a while. Regardless, this is a step in the right direction.
The improved fight scheme is also a step in the right direction. WWE 2K26 is the franchise’s most immersive entry to date because of how fluid the action plays out.
The meh: Iterative game modes
Every yearly sports simulator falls prey to the curse of iteration. Because it’s an annual release, every game needs to add something new for players. At the same time, the same game can’t iterate too much, or it might end up alienating fans of the previous title. Each WWE 2K title has to be the same but also a bit different.
WWE 2K26 goes through the same rigamarole. Most of the game’s different modes don’t offer a lot of improvements from last year. So, if you loved last year’s MyRISE, MyGM, and Universe Mode, you’ll likely find this year’s iteration inoffensive.
“Inoffensive,” however, isn’t the best way to sell a new game. At the very least, MyFACTION gets interesting improvements. For a mode I historically dislike every year, WWE 2K26’s MyFACTION ended up being the one I loved the most this year.
This year, the layout feels more intentional. Though it still lacks the exciting animations of NBA 2K, opening a pack no longer looks like a PowerPoint presentation. There’s also more ways to fight offline with the addition of a challenging World Tour mode. Plus, with intergender support and team chemistry, this feels like the update that MyFACTION needed.
In another twist of fate, Showcase Mode ended up being the loser this year. WWE 2K26 rehashes last year’s schtick of having the star rewrite their history. Last year, this worked with Paul Heyman, a notorious bad guy. It doesn’t really stick with this year’s star, CM Punk, the so-called voice of the voiceless.
Punk could have shined with the traditional style of laying their commentaries over their past matches, especially with his shoot style. Instead, we got a series of what-ifs with practically no commentary. It’s just not what I expected from a firebrand like CM Punk.
The bad: The Ringside Pass
For the first time in the series, WWE 2K26 has a battle pass called the Ringside Pass. Like battle passes in other games, the Ringside Pass unlocks more content as you play through the game. However, unlike today’s standard which revolves mostly on cosmetics, this version locks a treasure trove of playable wrestlers behind an experience gate.
Even if you already paid for the game, WWE 2K26 asks you to play an inordinate number of hours just to unlock the best wrestlers in the game.
To be fair, it’s not all bad. Right out the gate, the game already gives you access to heavy hitters like CM Punk, Shawn Michaels, and John Cena. However, a lot of favorites are still unplayable including Bret Hart and Kurt Angle. This even includes the strongest version of Bray Wyatt, who’s locked under the last tier of the current pass.
Gaining experience isn’t an easy feat, either. After playing for hours and hours, I still haven’t unlocked more than half of the tiers. At the very least, there is no time limit, so I can play the game at my own pace.
Props to WWE 2K26 for making its battle pass have fulfilling rewards, but it’s still unfortunate that significant elements of the game are locked behind hours and hours of playtime.
The gameplay loop is real and repetitive. And it all circles back to how iterative the game modes are. If only the game modes ended up being as exciting as they were last year, then it would have been exciting to play over and over again. Instead, WWE 2K26 prevents you from engaging in greatest strengths: an exciting roster and a fluid fighting system.
Is WWE 2K26 your PlayMatch?
Last year’s WWE 2K25 was an exciting period for the series. Though this year’s version keeps most of what made the previous game so exciting, WWE 2K26 also adds features, especially the Ringside Pass, that ultimately detract from the entire experience. It’s a small step back, which can hopefully be rectified next year, if not in future updates.
WWE 2K26 is a Swipe Left if you didn’t love last year’s game anyway. The game doesn’t add anything that might change your mind.
However, it’s a Swipe Right if you missed the pure joy of creating dream matches. The game’s massive roster allows for so many impossible matchups to happen, even if only in the digital realm. Just get ready to grind for a long time.
Some smartphones aim to stand out. Others just aim to work. The HONOR X8d falls squarely into the second category.
In day-to-day use, it presents itself as a device that focuses on the essentials. It’s functional, predictable, and easy to understand—but also a reminder of how noticeable the gap can be once performance and responsiveness start to lag behind.
A design-first approach
The HONOR X8d makes a decent first impression. It’s slim, relatively lightweight, and easy to hold despite packing a large battery. The flat sides and smooth back give it a clean, modern look, while the camera module adds a bit of visual identity.
It’s available in Light Blue, Velvet Black, and Velvet Grey—options that lean into its youthful positioning. The device also feels sturdy in hand, backed by SGS certification for drop and crush resistance, along with IP65-level protection against dust and splashes.
For a device in this category, the HONOR X8d delivers a build that feels dependable enough for daily use.
Display and media: Bright and usable
Up front, the HONOR X8d features a 6.77-inch AMOLED display with a 120Hz refresh rate and up to 3000 nits peak brightness. Colors are vibrant, and the panel supports 100% DCI-P3, which helps content look lively.
For casual viewing, the experience is serviceable. Watching shows or videos feels comfortable, and the high brightness ensures visibility even under harsh lighting. Features like 3840Hz PWM dimming and E-Book mode also help reduce eye strain during extended use.
Now Playing: One Piece Season 2

I skimmed through a few episodes of the One Piece Season 2 live action on Netflix and again it was… alright. Nothing here will blow you away but it serves its purpose.
I also listened to “Attitude” by aespa on YouTube music and it just echoes the general feeling of the phone – serviceable.
That said, the overall experience remains straightforward. It delivers what you need for day-to-day media consumption without going much further.
Performance is where compromises show
The HONOR X8d runs on the Snapdragon 6s 4G Gen 2 paired with 8GB of RAM. On paper, it’s positioned for everyday tasks, but in practice, performance leans on the modest side.
Basic interactions like switching between apps or scrolling through feeds can feel slower than expected. There’s a noticeable delay at times, even during simple tasks, which affects the overall flow of the experience.
This extends to camera usage as well, where responsiveness can occasionally feel a step behind. The device remains usable, but the pacing may feel dragging depending on what you’re used to.
Cameras are reliable in good light
The HONOR X8d is equipped with a 108MP main camera alongside a 5MP wide camera, with a 16MP shooter up front.
In good lighting conditions, the phone produces decent images. Shots are clear enough, with acceptable detail and color for social media sharing. The camera system also benefits from a suite of AI tools such as AI Eraser, AI Cutout, and AI Upscale, which add flexibility when editing photos.
Zoom options at 1x, 2x, and 3x remain usable, though results are best when lighting is favorable. Overall, the camera system is dependable for casual snaps.
Software and AI: familiar, feature-filled
Running on MagicOS 10 based on Android 16, the HONOR X8d comes with a feature-rich software experience. It includes tools like AI Translate, AI Writing, AI Notes, and AI Recorder, alongside features such as Magic Portal and Circle to Search.
Like many Android skins today, MagicOS follows a design approach that will feel immediately familiar. The layout, navigation, and overall structure borrow heavily from the iOS-inspired blueprint that most brands have adopted. It’s easy to get into, even for less experienced users.
Typical of entry-level smartphones, the device also includes app recommendations out of the box. Thankfully, these aren’t overly intrusive, and many of the suggested apps are ones users would likely install anyway.
The software helps add depth to the overall package, even if the hardware limits how smooth everything feels in actual use.
Battery and everyday use is a clear strength
One of the standout features of the HONOR X8d is its 7000mAh battery. It’s designed to last through extended use, whether for streaming, browsing, or everyday communication.
Paired with 45W HONOR SuperCharge, topping up the device remains relatively quick. For users who prioritize longevity over speed, this is easily one of the more reliable aspects of the phone.
Is the HONOR X8d your GadgetMatch?
When HONOR Philippines was first teasing the phone it was positioned as something for students. But if I were a parent, I’m pretty sure I’d like my kid to have some kind of advantage and not have to deal with a device that might not be able to keep up with them.
After learning that it’s priced at PhP 15,999 my verdict just became much clearer. This is a Swipe Left.
Add a few more to that price and you can get an excellent smartphone at its early bird price.
The HONOR X8d focuses on delivering the basics—design that works, a large battery, and a feature-filled software experience.
However, the overall experience depends heavily on what you prioritize. For users who simply need a phone that can get through daily tasks, the X8d does enough to hold its ground. For those who value speed and responsiveness, it may feel a step behind.
Whether it fits your needs ultimately comes down to how much you’re willing to trade performance for battery life and features.
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