Reviews

realme 12+ 5G review: One month later

What is it like to spend a month with a midrange smartphone?

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What is it like to spend a month with a midrange smartphone?

For someone spoiled with high-end, flagship smartphones, a watered-down experience terrifies me. I couldn’t fathom using just a midrange smartphone, even if I’m counted as a casual user.

But spending a month with the realme 12+ 5G gave me a new perspective on what midrange smartphones at 2024 can do.

Powerhouse at a fraction

A lot of times, I’ve used the realme 12+ 5G to play Mobile Legends: Bang Bang. I know, I know. It’s 2024 and I’m still playing the same old MOBA but it’s a game I know all too well that helps me de-stress after a long day.

See, I’m an athlete balancing my work and life. Sometimes, I just want to rot in bed while playing on my phone.

The realme 12+ 5G helped keep me sane thanks to its lag-free gameplay. Not once did I feel any heat or slowing down even while playing in an Ultra Graphics and Super High Frame Rate setting.

The Vapor Chamber Cooling System came into play, dissipating the heat so even if under heavy usage, the gameplay is still optimal.

Moreover, the realme 12+ 5G uses a MediaTek Dimensity 7050 chipset. When you combine this with a 12GB dynamic ram that’s expandable through your storage space, you won’t have to worry about a watered-down experience from using a midrange device.

The RAM can take up from 4GB up to 12GB to be re-allocated from the 256GB internal storage. Though, I only used 4GB since I didn’t feel the need to turn it up to the highest configuration. It’s already smooth even when multi-tasking.

 

It may not be as smooth as the flagship smartphones I held, but it’s enough particularly for people who just needs a smartphone they can use for their everyday lives. However, if you want a midrange device dedicated for an even more intensive gameplay, I’d suggest looking elsewhere.

Daily companion for viewing, listening

When I was on my way home from my training, I drove past a busy road in Pasig City where vendors are in the streets, bystanders are frolicking, and loafers gossip while taking space through the plastic stools they sat on spread out near the sidewalk.

What do they have in common? Smartphones. There was a realization that the Filipino masses rely on their devices to be entertained and connected.

I have a feeling that if I wasn’t a multi-passionate person with an insanely hectic schedule, I’d bury my head on a smartphone, too.

This is where having a spectacular audio-visual performance comes into play, especially for budget and midrange devices. Luckily, the realme 12+ 5G has a 120HZ Super AMOLED Display and Dual Stereo Speakers.

It’s one of the reasons why I started playing Mobile Legends: Bang Bang again when I was decompressing for the day.

Aside from doomscrolling on TikTok, I just like it when the display is fluid, vivid, and smooth while the audio can be as loud and immersive. Unlike most midrange smartphones, the audio-visual performance is always a hit or miss.

Sometimes, they have an excellent screen while the audio suffers, or vice-versa. The realme 12+ 5G just have it both.

Capture it, remember it

The realme 12+ 5G uses a 50-megapixel SonyLYT 600 OIS Portrait Camera, an 8-megapixel 112° wide-angle lens, a 2-megapixel macro sensor, and a 16-megapixel selfie camera on the front.

I used the smartphone to capture photos I send to my loved ones. From selfies, coffee runs, hotel visits, group photos, food shots, and just anything and everything in my life.

The quality for low-light shots is a hit or miss, but for photos taken during daytime and with good lighting? It’s just spectacular.

Here are some sample photos to look at:

Portraits & Selfies

Food

Sceneries

Everyday photos

Real on reliability

The realme 12+ 5G’s battery capacity is just *chef’s kiss*.

Its ability to retain its battery life even on standby is just incredibly helpful for someone who keeps forgetting to charge his devices.

The realme 12+ 5G lasts long enough when out for the day, and even if you spend a lot of hours playing games and doomscrolling.

One time, I played Mobile Legends: Bang Bang for three hours straight from a full charge, and I still had enough juice to keep playing. That 5000mAh battery surely is a lot of juice that doesn’t drain easily. I had to be the one to give up playing since it hurt my eyes already.

Charging it with 67W SuperVOOC, the realme 12+ 5G gets full charge in less than an hour. This is why even if I forget to charge it at night, I just have to plug the charger in the USB-C port while I was taking a bath and prepping for work.

Could’ve been a real premium

Aside from its performance and capabilities, the realme 12+ 5G comes with a strong and beautiful exterior. The unit I have came in Pioneer Green, resembling an emerald-touch of old money.

Without a plastic case, it’s soft, feels luxurious, and easy to hold even with a boxy frame. At a glance, it’s even more beautiful with its luxury watch-inspired design, thanks to designer Ollivier Savéo.

For a midrange device, realme has a knack for making its devices look and feel sophisticated. Furthermore, it’s dust and splash proof with its IP54 rating. It’s a win-win, right? Strong and pretty at the same time.

My only issue would be the realme UI 5.0 based on Android 14 that’s packed with bloatware. Look- and feel-wise, the realme 12+ 5G would be a premium stunner, even with its camera, audio-visual, and battery performance.

But the UI design along with the unnecessary bloatware made it cheap and annoying to look at.

Is this your GadgetMatch?

The realme 12+ 5G delivers what you’d expect out of a midrange smartphone. It’s premium-looking, long-lasting, offers reliable performance, and captures vivid portraits and pictures.

It’s easily a GadgetMatch for casual users requiring enough power and juice on a device that looks pretty and strong. If the realme 12 Pro+ 5G is a midrange marvel, consider the realme 12+ 5G almost the same, but at a lesser cost.

It retails for PhP 19,999 for the 12GB+256GB variant, while the 8GB+256GB unit is priced at PhP 17,999.

Reviews

Shokz OpenFit Pro: Somewhere between awareness and focus

Find your balance

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Shokz OpenFit Pro

Somewhere between “stay aware” and “tune things out.” That’s exactly where the Shokz OpenFit Pro lands. It didn’t fully make sense to me at first. But after about a week of using it almost everywhere, it started to click.

First impressions: familiar, but better

For context, I’ve only used a couple of open-ear options before — the HONOR Earbuds Open and the Shokz OpenDots One. I also heard from a colleague that “Pro” versions tend to feel heavier.

That wasn’t my experience here.

Shokz OpenDots ONE

The first few minutes with the OpenFit Pro felt just right. Not too heavy, not awkward. Just… there. In a good way.

What stood out more immediately was how visible they are. These aren’t the kind of earbuds that blend in or pass off as accessories. If someone looks at you, they’ll know you’re wearing earphones.

And then there’s the sound.

Shokz OpenFit Pro

I could immediately tell they were better than both the Earbuds Open and OpenDots One. That was the first real “okay” moment.

It just fit into my day

Shokz OpenFit Pro

Since unboxing, I’ve kind of just been using the OpenFit Pro everywhere.

I worked at a café for about four hours with it on. Took calls — both work and casual. Wore it while walking around.

In the week or so that I’ve used it, it felt appropriate in pretty much every scenario I found myself in. Mostly casual ones, but still.

There are moments where I’d still reach for something like the OpenDots One — especially when I want something more subtle, like at events or even on a date.

But lately, I’ve been picking up the OpenFit Pro more. Mostly because of the sound quality and the flexibility you get with the noise reduction options.

The kind of sound that lets you sit in it

Shokz OpenFit Pro

I’ve been stuck on a single playlist lately — a mix of chill neo soul and indie pop. Tracks like “Gorilla Grip” by Greg Shilling and “Psychosomatic” by Azkal. That’s been my vibe and the OpenFit Pro fits right into that.

At this price point (PhP 14,990 / USD 249.95), I expected it to sound good. Thankfully, it does.

The sound is clean, clear, and crisp. That’s really the best way to describe it.

Bass doesn’t hit you in a physical, “thumpin’” way, but it’s present. It rings. It sits where it should.

I usually test with “Turn It Up” by TWICE and “Summer Romance (Anti-Gravity Love Song)” by Incubus, and both come through nicely.

What I appreciated most is how easy it is to isolate sounds in your head. If you’re the type to mentally pick apart layers in a track, this makes that easy.

Dolby Atmos adds another layer to that experience. Tracks like “Sobakasu” by Judy and Mary and “⅓ No Junjo Na Kanjo” by Siam Shade feel like they move around you.

It’s the kind of sound that makes you want to move a little. Nothing dramatic. Just enough to groove.

Noise reduction, but still open

Shokz OpenFit Pro

The main feature here is open-ear noise reduction. I turned it on right away during a café work session. It works best for tuning down general noise — conversations, ambient chatter, the usual café sounds. It doesn’t eliminate them, and that’s the point.

Vehicle noise gets reduced too, but to a lesser extent. It doesn’t fight your music. It just sits behind it. I wouldn’t say it feels weird or unnatural. It just does what it says it does.

You still hear the world. Just… less of it when you want to.

Awareness that feels intentional

This is probably the core of the experience. It never really felt like I was “half-present.” It felt intentional.

If I’m semi-engaged in conversation, I can turn noise reduction off and just let everything in. If I want a bit more focus, I turn it on.

Walking was where I appreciated it most.

I walked quite a bit with these on, and it helped me stay aware of my surroundings. I moved pretty much the same way I normally would — just with a bit more awareness in the background.

And if I’m locked into work, the outside noise fades anyway.

Comfortable, with a presence

Shokz OpenFit Pro

On my first day, I wore it for four straight hours and honestly forgot about it.

After that, I started to feel it around the two-hour mark — not in a bad way. More like a reminder that it’s there.

But it never got to the point where it felt tiring or uncomfortable.

It only fell off once, and that was after taking off a helmet from a moto taxi. Outside of that, it stayed put no matter how I moved.

And I didn’t exactly take it easy either — there was some random dancing in the elevator and a bit of headbanging in my room.

It held up.

Calls that just work

I took several calls using the OpenFit Pro — all indoors, mostly with minimal background noise.

Here’s the feedback I got:
“It was pretty clear. There wasn’t much noise except for during the start of the call. It’s like there’s just one layer. Then noise cancellation was good because there was no background noise. I wouldn’t know if phone or earbuds in that sense.”

That last part stands out. If the person on the other end can’t tell whether you’re using earbuds or just your phone, that’s usually a good sign.

I’d trust this for important calls.

Battery that just exists

Battery life is one of those things I didn’t really have to think about.

I used it throughout the day and charged it when I got home. That’s it.

There was even a day I forgot to charge it, and it still had enough battery for my usual usage the next day.

No stress. No adjustments needed.

The trade-offs are mostly visual

If there’s one thing you’re giving up here, it’s subtlety. These are not discreet. People will notice you’re wearing them. If that matters to you, this might be a dealbreaker.

The black version helps if you want something more low-key. The white one stands out more — which I personally like.

Beyond that, there weren’t any real frustrations. Maybe the price, but given the tech and overall experience, it makes sense.

A lifestyle fit that makes sense

This feels like it’s made for people who move around a lot and don’t mind being seen.

Active, unbothered, always in motion.

It’s so easy to use and comfortable enough that I found myself listening to more music during short walks. I didn’t have to worry about it falling off the way I sometimes do with in-ear options.

It just fits into that kind of lifestyle naturally.

Shokz OpenFit Pro

The moment it clicked

For me, it clicked right after setup. I connected it to the app, tried the head tracking, toggled noise cancellation on and off, even tested it without anything playing. Shook my head like a crazy person. The works.

From there, everything just lined up.

I liked the sound immediately. The comfort made sense. The controls were simple and easy to learn.

It felt like something I’d actually want to keep using.

Is the Shokz OpenFit Pro your GadgetMatch?

Shokz OpenFit Pro

At this price, the OpenFit Pro positions itself as a main pair of earbuds — and it can absolutely be that.

It fits into most situations where you’d want to wear headphones.

Especially if you’re someone who likes music as a constant companion — whether you’re working out, walking around, or just moving through your day like you’re in your own little movie.

For people like that, this is a Swipe Right.

If the open-ear look isn’t your thing, though, that’s an easy Swipe Left.

Bonus: choosing this over traditional earbuds

This is funny, but I haven’t picked up my Galaxy Buds4 Pro at all since I started using the OpenFit Pro. The Buds4 Pro are still better in terms of overall sound and features. But I just find open-ear headphones more comfortable to wear.

At the end of the day, it comes down to comfort and how you want to show up. And right now, this is the one I keep reaching for.

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Practical Smart Home

Why this 180-degree gimbal projector is a “small win” for solo living

At $200, the XGODY N6 Pro transformed my one-bedroom apartment into a sanctuary of independence

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For a long time, I didn’t have a home entertainment setup.

As a young adult navigating the nuances of solo living, my iPad Pro was my constant companion. It was my theater and my window to the world, especially on those nights when the silence of a one-bedroom apartment hit a little too hard.

I’ve spent countless hours with that 11-inch screen as my only guest, filling the void with comfort shows while I worked, even though my space was perfectly capable of housing a real Smart TV.

But buying a TV felt like… commitment. A TV is a centerpiece you decorate around; an invitation for people to gather.

If you walked into my apartment, you’d see it doesn’t scream “hosting duties.” It screams sleep, train, grind, recover, and repeat.

There is no plush couch, no mahogany entertainment center. While it might look unusually sparse to others, it is mine.

And one of the best parts of living alone is making the final call on what actually fills your space. On one of my loneliest nights, the XGODY N6 Pro arrived, and suddenly, it shifted my state of mind from merely surviving to actually thriving in the life I built.

$200 of freedom

At US$ 200, the XGODY N6 Pro isn’t a casual purchase. When you’re living independently, every dollar is a tactical decision. There’s no safety net, no “calling home” if the budget breaks.

But even when you’re grinding, you deserve to have small luxuries; something that makes your life feel bigger than the room you are in.

For instance, watching your favorite shows projected across your own walls is the ultimate treat after a day spent exhausted.

What surprised me most was how the projector adjusted to me, not the other way around. The 180-degree gimbal design sounds technical, but in reality, it simply means freedom.

I don’t have a proper tech setup, so I used my bar stool as a stand. It didn’t matter. Whether I’m sitting on my fabric gaming chair or tucked into bed, I just pivot the lens to whatever surface works best.

For once, I’m not craning my neck over a screen and I’m not adjusting myself to fit the device. It fits into my life exactly as it is.

Seamlessly self-sufficient

Independence changes the way you see technology. When your brain is fried from a long day, you just need life to be a tad easier.  I don’t want complicated or demanding; I just want things that do their job so I can breathe.

The remote-controlled electric focus and Auto Keystone Correction, in a way, are life-savers. I didn’t have to do anything, because the N6 Pro automatically squares the image as I pivot from wall to ceiling.

Its screen can stretch up to 200 inches, which still feels surreal to say out loud, though it’s smart enough to shrink if it detects an obstruction like a light switch.

Sometimes, it takes a moment to fully lock into clarity, though I have learned to appreciate that pause. It reminds me that not everything has to be instant to be worth it. (Especially since this is a budget device, I don’t want to ask too much.)

What truly impressed me was the WiFi 6 support. Streaming is smooth, and screen mirroring feels effortless. It reduces lag significantly, meaning my comfort shows never buffer.

With WhaleOS and 8,000+ apps built-in, I have everything I need right there.

Now Playing: People We Meet On Vacation

While I was getting used to the XGODY N6 Pro, Netflix dropped People We Meet On Vacation. And somehow, it felt personal.

Poppy, the main character, spends her life chasing the next experience. Her avoidance of settling mirrors my own desire for freedom. Always “catching flights, not feelings.”

Right now, every home is just a layover before my next destination. But having a projector like the N6 Pro makes me feel like I can take my sanctuary anywhere.

Poppy eventually found her happy ending, but I’m still in the chapters where I enjoy meeting new people and seeing new places.

For now, this projector is a companion; it’s there for the mundane moments when I return home from a long trip and need to decompress after the vacation ends.

Turning into a ritual

Even with 15,000 lumens, let’s be real: this is a creature of the night. It’s vibrant and clear in a dark room, but like most budget LEDs, it struggles when the sun peaks in.

I’ve turned my movie time into a ritual: closing the curtains and letting the night soak in, so I can watch the colors come alive.

The 10,000:1 contrast ratio and 4K decoding provide enough depth to make the scenes feel sincere. Though, I’m happy with the 1080p native resolution already.

While the built-in 5W Hi-Fi speaker isn’t going to shake the walls, it’s enough for the eerie silence of a solo apartment. With Bluetooth 5.2, I usually pair my JBL Charge 6 for a fuller sound, but honestly, there are nights where the built-in audio is just enough.

Is the XGODY N6 Pro your GadgetMatch?

Living alone is made up of small wins.

Cooking your own meals. Keeping your space clean. Learning how to sit with yourself. And sometimes, turning a blank wall into your own home theater.

At US$200, the XGODY N6 Pro projects the pride of a life built on my own terms. It’s a reminder that you don’t need a massive living room to live a massive life.

Swipe Right if you’re a young adult trying to make it in the city, living in a space where every square inch is precious real estate.

It’s for the independent soul who wants the “Smart TV” experience through Android TV 11 and WiFi 6 without the bulky furniture that usually comes with it. It offers an excellent price-to-performance ratio for anyone who treats their home like a sanctuary, or a temporary layover.

Swipe Left if you are the kind of person who needs absolute technical perfection to feel satisfied. Similarly, if you’re an audiophile who expects a 5W built-in speaker to mimic a Dolby Atmos theater, you’ll find the sound a bit thin.

This isn’t the device for those who want a permanent, high-end home theater installation; it’s too scrappy and mobile for that kind of rigidity.

As I look up at the ceiling, I appreciate how far I’ve come from that 11-inch screen. And I realize I am no longer passing through. I am home.


The XGODY N6 Pro is available through its official website and online retailers like Amazon.

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Reviews

Nothing Phone (4a) + (4a) Pro review

Is “different” actually better?

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Starting at $499, the Nothing Phone (4a) Pro is taking a massive swing at Apple’s iPhone 17e and Google’s Pixel 10a.

With a new aluminum unibody, a 50MP periscope telephoto camera, and a slightly toned-down Glyph Matrix, Nothing is making a case that “mid-range” doesn’t have to mean “boring.”

And, after testing these on the streets of London and New York, can a brand that prides itself on being “different” actually survive?

In this Nothing Phone (4a) + (4a) Pro review, we’re going deep not just on its design and upgraded cameras, we also want to talk about how Nothing is becoming the “Balenciaga of Tech” under Charlie Smith’s vision — or LOEWE’s former executive.

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