Unlike other mid-range offerings from the beginning of 2022, the Realme 9 Pro and Pro+ both launch with Android 12 out of the box customized with Realme's own UI on top. So kudos for that.
Visually, the OS hasn't changed much. Realme UI has a colorful UI with customizable UI elements and its own iconography for the notification shade and the general Settings menu. The app drawer hasn't been tweaked too but we did notice a bit of inconsistency with the swipe up and swipe down gestures on the Home screen when opening/closing the drawer. A small annoyance that wouldn't bother most users.
Realme also kept the so-called Icon pull-down gesture. Swiping alongside the left or right edge of the screen crams icons at the bottom half of the screen so they can be easily reached with your thumb. The gesture is pretty reliable as well. By default, the swipe down gesture on the Home screen opens up the so-called global search but you can always set the notification shade instead.
Home screen, app drawer, Settings menu
When it comes to Android 12-specific features, most of them are under-the-hood changes. However, the privacy-focused efforts from Google are translated into Realme UI 3.0. The so-called Privacy dashboard is one example. It's a unified view for all your permissions and user data settings. It gives you information on which apps and how often they access your information or ask for certain permissions. It looks and feels like the Digital wellbeing dashboard introduced with Android 10.
In addition to those privacy features, Android 12 lets you choose the accuracy of your location shared with certain apps. Let's say you want to share an approximate location with some apps instead of your exact location. And when a certain app is accessing your mic or camera, a green dot will appear in the upper-right corner of the screen so you'd know what's going on.
For a more in-depth look at Android 12, we suggest reading our full Android 12 review as we will try to focus on the Realme UI itself in the following paragraphs.
As before, Realme UI offers deep customization of the interface by letting you choose accent colors (or a combination of accent colors), wallpapers, icons, the shape of the quick toggles as well as the font and size. All of these settings are found in the Personalization sub-menu.
There's usually an Always-on display setting in there as well but since the phone is using an IPS LCD panel, there's no such thing here. This also means that you won't benefit much from the system-wide Dark mode unless you are using the handset in a really dark environment. It's easier on your eyes.
Under the Special features sub-menu, Realme put the Smart sidebar and Flexible windows features, both of which boost multitasking. When turned on, the sidebar offers quick access to some of your favorite apps. The system allows you to adjust the position of the sidebar, which is crucial because it might interfere with the back gesture if you are using the standard Android gestures. Anyway, tap and hold on an app icon enters split-screen mode while a single tap opens up the app in a floating window or as Realme likes to call it, "Flexible window". The supported apps can be opened in small, draggable and size-adjustable windows.
The good old screen-off gestures that allow you to launch certain apps or the flashlight by drawing letters on a locked screen are here to stay.
In the Realme labs, where the company likes to introduce experimental features, there's one that caught our eye. You can stream music to a Bluetooth headset and wired headphones simultaneously. Pretty neat if you are traveling with a friend and want to listen to the same tunes.
Lastly, let's talk about the fingerprint reader. It's a side-mounted one, dubbed as a power button. It's fast and reliable but we had one small issue with it - there's no option to unlock the phone only when you press the key. There are, however, two ways to unlock the handset - with a light or firm touch of the sensor. The light touch would sometimes try to read your palm or another part of your skin and can result in a temporarily locked screen. Firm touch, on the other hand, isn't exactly what you'd expect. A firmer press won't unlock the display. Instead, you have to actually press the power key, release it and then touch the scanner again to unlock the device. Definitely not ideal.
All in all, though, the Realme UI 3.0 looks snappy, offers some new features and looks and feels the same as the previous iteration of the software, for better or worse. It's also highly customizable and that's something a lot of Android users are looking for. Bonus points for that.
This is the first time we meet the new Snapdragon 695 5G chipset, which is a successor to the Snapdragon 690. Despite the incremental numeric change in the name, the chipset is actually totally revamped. Along with the newer, more powerful CPU cores and GPU, the chip boasts mmWave 5G connectivity and is based on a more modern 6nm manufacturing process by TSMC. This wasn't a thing in the older Snapdragon 690.
The main two Kryo 560 Gold (Cortex-A77) cores are replaced with Kryo 660 Gold (Cortex-A78) cores clocked at 2.2 GHz while the six energy-efficient Kryo 560 Silver (Cortex-A55) clocked at 1.7 GHz remain the same. There's only a change in the name, now called Kryo 660 Silver. The Adreno 619L GPU has been replaced with a full-fledged Adreno 619. The SD695 now supports faster LPDDR4X memory at 2133 MHz as well.
The whole hardware upgrade is supposed to boost CPU performance by up to 15% and GPU by 30%. We put that to the test in our usual synthetic benchmarks. We've also put it against other competing SoCs available in similarly-priced rivals.
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
The Snapdragon 695 5G shows great CPU performance in both multi-threaded and single-threaded tasks. It even managed to get ahead of some Snapdragon 700-series and Dimensity 8xx and 7xx rivals with ease. It maintains the lead in combined workloads as well getting closely behind the Dimensity 920-powered Realme 9 Pro+ and the Poco X3 Pro's Snapdragon 860 chip.
In heavy GPU-bound tasks, the SD 695 performs similarly to the Snapdragon 750G and the Snapdragon 480+, which is to be expected given that they all share the same Adreno 619 GPU. And it even takes a modest lead over some of its competitors. The Dimensity 920 on the Pro+ model, though, is still the more powerful solution with its Mali-G68 MC4.
We ran the standard CPU stress test (as the CPU is the main heat contributor) for 30 minutes straight to see how the handset would fare under prolonged gaming sessions. The Snapdragon 695 5G chip seems to be running relatively cool and the software didn't detect thermal throttling at all, which is great.
The hardware is good enough to run under load without any hiccups and we didn't notice any excessive heat on the exterior as well.
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