The Meizu M3 Max runs on Flyme 5.2.4.0 OS, which was built on top of an Android 6.0 Marshmallow core. Flyme, just like Apple's iOS, revolves around a single-tier UI - every app or widget resides directly on the homescreen without an additional app drawer that is typical for Android. All other system features can be configured through either the Settings menu or within the powerful Security app.
The lockscreen* the homescreen • the notifications drawer • toggles • Security app
Flyme offers a variety of customization options, including themes. There are lots of useful system-wide gestures, which you can use even when the screen is turned off. DND mode, scheduled power on and off are available, too.
Themes • themes • themes • scheduled power on/off • DND mode
Flyme 5 supports multi-view, which is managed via the task switching interface. The supported apps have a 'Multi' button, and you can activate a split-screen app right away. Unfortunately, the apps to support multi-view are only two - Video and Settings. Hopefully, this list will grow bigger with the upcoming firmware updates.
Task switcher • multi-view in action
Meizu provides all the necessary apps to get you started - gallery, multimedia players, calendar, weather, among other necessities, but you can find everything else in the Play Store.
Meizu M3 Max is powered by the wide-spread, but rather mediocre MediaTek Helio P10. It packs an octa-core processor with 4x Cortex-A53 at 1.8GHz and 4x A53 at 1.0GHz. The GPU is quite uninspiring - the Mali-T860 MP2 (read dual-core), but on a positive note there is 3GB of RAM for heavy multi-tasking.
The benchmark tests show the M3 Max outs average scores across the board and will provide an OK for a mid-ranger experience, though we've seen better.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
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