Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 comes with standard Android 12 and MIUI Fold 13 UI. Not having Android 12L like the Galaxies means the Mix Fold 2 cannot offer as flexible UI as Samsung's competitors.
Having such two large and amazing screens gives you a choice - work on a smartphone or on a tablet display. Indeed, the Mix Fold 2 is more like a foldable tablet, and its UI across the large screen is tablet reminiscent. And switching between those is always a breeze.
The Mix Fold 2 is exclusive to China and will probably remain this way. If you decide on importing it, you will meet the Chinese version of MIUI that is a bit different from the international, and while it has built-in Google Services, you need to install the apps like Play Store, Maps and Chrome from the Xiaomi app store.
So, the first things you will notice are differences in the software package - there's a lot of pre-installed Chinese apps. Thankfully, you can remove pretty much all of them.
The default keyboard has the usual Chinese input capabilities and is somewhat difficult to operate from a Western user's standpoint, but Gboard is right there in the Play Store.
Still, there will be remains of Chinese elements here or there in the UI or in the system apps. Plus, we can't be certain if one or another software peculiarity wouldn't become an issue in the long run for more niche use cases. There's the Netflix SD cap, for one.
Chinese apps • GetApps • Xiaomi Browser • Keyboard • Play Store
Then there's the fact that some things in the UI and feature set are just different and that we find odd.
For example, in some system apps (like the Clock) where the global MIUI builds use icons for different tabs, the Chinese build has simple text labels. The File Manager has that difference too, plus a different look of the Recent tab.
There are other things as well. The Mix Fold 2's Chinese MIUI has a new and improved widget interface, with better-defined categories, tons of widgets and a search feature. Admittedly, a lot of the widgets we're getting are in Chinese, and we did remove nearly all of the pre-installed apps, yet there are still so many of them, but the new interface is still better.
Clock • File Manager • File Manager • Widgets
Next up, Xiaomi's own take on the Privacy Dashboard. Google released this privacy hub with Android 12, and different makers have been implementing it in their own ways, and Xiaomi itself has done it in two different ways depending on localization. Here the permissions are designated with icons, as opposed to the text labels in the global MIUI builds. Still, you get essentially the same functionality for keeping track of what app has used what permission when - it's just organized in a different way.
It doesn't end there, naturally. We found no way to revert to a classic notification shade with quick toggles as the norm on most Androids - the Mix Fold only has the two-pane option with notifications on the left and Control center on the right. Similarly, you don't get to choose the UI of the Recent apps - it's just the MIUI standard two-cards-per-row interface.
Privacy • Privacy • Privacy • Notifications • Control Center • Recent apps
None of these differences take away from the MIUI experience. Depending on how you like your Xiaomi to behave, you might not notice that certain things are different or missing.
Always-on display functionality is there with all the customizability you can ask for.
The homescreens are business as usual - they are populated with shortcuts, folders, and widgets. You can choose whether to have an app drawer or not - that option has not been taken away. The leftmost pane is reserved for widgets only - it's not the Google Discover.
Lockscreen • Homescreen • Homescreen • Folder view • App drawer • Widget pane
You unlock the screen via the side-mounted fingerprint scanner. It's always-on, fast and amazingly reliable, no complaints there. It can be set to trigger either on Press or on Touch. The latter may yield misreads due to its position, and that's why Xiaomi has set its default operation to be on Press.
Aside from the fingerprint reader, you can unlock the phone using 2D Face Unlock, but it is far less secure than the fingerprint option.
Biometric security • Fingerprint settings • Face unlock
MIUI comes with its proprietary multimedia apps - there's Gallery, and Music and Mi Video. And, of course, a Mi Remote app that uses the integrated IR blaster.
Then there's the Security app. It can scan your phone for malware, manage your blacklist, manage or restrict your data usage, configure battery behavior, and free up some RAM. It can also manage the permissions of your installed apps, define the battery behavior of selected apps, and apply restrictions only to certain apps.
Gallery • Music • Video • Mi Remote • Security
We'll reiterate that the division in design and functionality between Chinese and global MIUI builds perplexes us, but there could be some regional and cultural nuances that Xiaomi gets, and we don't. You could seemingly use the Mix Fold 2 just fine outside of China, though you'll never be able to completely remove all references to Chinese apps and services, and some specific things may not work at all.
Now, let's look at the larger UI for the foldable screen.
For starters, the screen always shows two homescreen panes instead of just one. And the leftmost widget page from the default UI now pops up on top of the default homescreen.
The Notification Shade drops down at the center of the display, while the Control Center always takes the left part of the screen - as intended.
Homescreens • Homescreens • Widget pane
The larger display allows for a larger dock, which in addition to six docked apps, also shows the three most recent ones.
Notification center • Control Center
Some apps, like Settings, Notes, File Manager, make use of the larger screen by offering split-screen UI.
Settings • Notes • File Manager
There is a special 'Features for foldable devices' menu, which explains the things you can do on the foldable screen.
Floating windows and conversation bubbles is the first category. Floating Windows work in a familiar fashion - there is a Sidebar where you choose from a list of customizable apps. Once you tap on the app icon, it will launch within a floating window with full functionality.
You can work with the floating app and move it around. You can also open it in full-screen, snap it on the left/right side to open split-screen view, or simply close it by swiping on its bottom part.
You can have up to two floating windows at the same time, and one or two apps in full-screen/split-screen mode opened in the background - this makes a total of four active apps on the screen.
The split-screen view is neat - but you cannot change its size - it's always 50/50, and the border is where the foldable display's crease is.
Conversation bubbles from supported apps like Messages, Mail, and social networks are supported, too.
The second option in the special Fold menu is to enable/disable Keep the screen after folding. This basically decides where you will continue to use the phone after you fold it or it will simply lock itself.
Wallpapers for foldable devices is pretty much self-explanatory - you will find plenty of cool wallpapers for your 8-inch screen here.
And finally, the last tab just explains how the default Baidu IME for MIUI keyboard is designed for this foldable device - with split-screen ergonomic UI, resizable, and with duplicated G and V letters for convenience.
The special foldable-oriented keyboard
Another function you can enable is during photo/video capturing - you can duplicate your viewfinder on the cover screen - a neat option if you are taking group shots or portraits.
And that's about it.
Some apps may not look good in the square aspect, while others are forced to run in landscape mode for whatever reason and we needed to rotate the phone. These didn't ruin the overall experience but were peculiarities that bothered us a bit.
The Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 utilizes the most current Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 5G chipset coupled with 12GB of RAM. While it does offer a minor performance boost in both CPU and GPU speeds, its most significant improvement is actually efficiency, thanks to a switch from Samsung to TSMC for the manufacturing (still at 4nm, technically).
As far as raw benchmark scores are concerned, the Mix Fold 2 has the most powerful Android processor on the market.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Same goes for the GPU benchmarks - there is no more powerful GPU on the market, and it thrives under the HRR displays.
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Higher is better
Finally, the compound AnTuTu 9 test put the Mix Fold 2 scores on top of our all-time chart.
Higher is better
So, as far as raw performance is concerned, the Mix Fold 2 is on top of the smartphone chain right now.
There is a but, of course, and it's quite obvious. The Mix Fold 2 is an incredibly thin smartphone, which means it's impossible to cool its flagship chipset in a meaningful enough way. While Xiaomi did advertise its heat-pipe cooling solution and graphite layers, we still cannot imagine it will be adequate.
And as far as GPU stability is concerned - it is not. The 3D Mark Stress Test cannot finish on either screen. The phone overheats after 7-8mins of peak GPU performance and kills every process, but the most essential ones needed to run the OS.
Overheating messages for GPU tests
The CPU stress test, which we usually leave running for 60 minutes, also heated the phone to some critical levels, and this led to killing unnecessary background tasks. But it never killed the foreground ones, such as the test itself, like it happened with the GPU stress test. And the CPU Throttle app did finish on both screens, and it scored 71% stability on the cover display and 75% stability for the inner screen - excellent scores all things considered.
During these stress tests, the phone healed a lot just under its camera island, and it was nearly impossible to put your fingers on this place for more than a couple of seconds. This is a spot where you rarely, if at all, rest you fingers, but still.
The Xiaomi Mix Fold 2 is an incredibly powerful smartphone, that can handle anything. Modern games run smooth and make use of the high refresh rate well. We had no issues with games - none of the ones we tried managed to overheat the phone, but the potential for overheating is there, and if you intend to use the Mix Fold 2 as a gaming device - you should seriously consider this issue, or even reconsider entirely.
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