Realme 8 5G in for review
Weâre in a transitional period â 5G is becoming more common, but is not yet the prevalent option. This is why we often get both a 4G and a 5G version of phones and, sometimes, the difference between them goes beyond the modem.
That is the case for the Realme 8 5G and its 4G sibling. Part of it is unavoidable, most chipsets these days have built-in modems, so if you want a 5G modem, you need to switch to a 5G chipset.
Realme picked the Dimensity 700, MediaTekâs most basic 5G chip. The modem is fine â it has a theoretical peak speed of 2.77 Gbps and, considering most next-gen networks are in their infancy, we donât think youâll need anything faster in the next couple of years.
Speaking of which, this is the first Dimensity 700-powered phone in India, a country yet to launch its first 5G network. It is coming, though, current expectations are that the first network will go live in late 2021 or early 2022. Itâs never too early to future-proof your phone, we guess.
But this chip can make or break the Realme 8 5G. It is the first Dimensity 700 weâve benchmarked and while weâll reserve judgment for the review, we have doubts that its GPU will make the best of the 90 Hz screen.
Speaking of, the 90 Hz panel is an IPS LCD instead of a Super AMOLED like on the 4G phone. As we said, differences go way beyond the modem. The display has three modes, 60 Hz, 90 Hz and Auto, and at first glance isnât nearly as bright as the AMOLED panel.
The camera is another concern. With no ultra wide module, we get a pretty basic setup with just a 48 MP camera (well, there are two 2 MP modules, but they barely count). Realme even arbitrarily cut some features like Starry Mode and Tilt-Shift Mode.
We can live without them, of course, but itâs worth keeping in mind that the Realme 8 and Realme 8 5G cost the same â ?15,000 in India and â¬200 in Europe. That is quite cheap as 5G phones go, mind you.
But even so, every downgrade makes our wallets shiver. Even if you donât see the screen as a downgrade (we know some prefer LCD over AMOLED), the camera clearly is. And so is the 5,000 mAh battery, which only goes up to 18W charging (down from 30W on the 4G model).
We do like Realme 8 5G. It has a sleek body and feels sturdier than the vanilla 8. The Supersonic Blue (the colorway we received) looks pretty and seems immune to fingerprints. We worry it might get scratched up, but itâs not that much of a concern since Realme included a case in the box. And an 18W charger too.
Still, do we like it more than its 4G sibling? Or any of the other 5G phones in this price range? The answer to that will arrive soon in the form of a full review, stay tuned!