AnTuTu bans Realme GT for three months over score-boosting allegations
Smartphone benchmarks are not without their doping scandals â in the latest turn of events AnTuTu has banned the Realme GT over suspicions of artificially boosting its scores. The benchmark team posted an explanation of what happened on Weibo along with with proof.
Before the GT was announced, VP Xu Qi Chase posted a screenshot showing 770,221 points. Thatâs a lot higher than a typical Snapdragon 888 device, most phones top out at 710,000 and even Qualcommâs reference design managed only 735,439. The AnTuTu team waited for the phone to go on sale and bought one for testing.
They got a 12/256 GB unit since RAM and storage affect the benchmark results (thereâs a photo of the receipt). And they did get a very respectable 750,000 points or so, but when they dug in deeper they found two issues.
The first one was in the multi-core test. The Realme GT scheduler was found to be holding back some threads that were meant to run on the small CPU cores until they can run on the big cores instead.
The second issue was discovered in the UX test (specifically JPG image decompression). The team noticed that the GT was skipping much of the processing that goes into JPG decompression and the resulting image is terribly pixelated and has gaps. Since decompressed images arenât shown to the user, this wasnât noticed immediately.
AnTuTu has decided to ban Realme GT scores for three months. If Realme changes the phoneâs software so that it behaves as expected, the GT will be reinstated after the ban is over. If it does not, the GT will be banned permanently.
When reached out for a comment a Realme spokesperson revealed to us that the company believes it hasn't broken any rules and that it's working with AnTuTu to resolve the issue.
The AnTuTu team is meanwhile working on version 9 of the benchmark, which will have additional anti-cheating measures â for example, if cheating is detected, then points will be deducted from the final score.