All right, this is the first time we're taking a look at a device from infinite. This is the hot 10s. A lot of you guys in the comments have been telling us about the infinite brand for a while, but we never actually tried it out. So this is our first video trying out infinite the hot tennis is a budget device oriented towards gamers a quick run up of the specs. You've got a massive 6.82 inch display with 90 hertz of refresh rate, a pretty huge 6000 William hour battery the hello g85 chipset, along with four gigs of ram, so on paper, pretty decent specs for a budget device. So, let's begin with some good old unboxing, as you can see, the box already is very colorful and vibrant and playful inside the box.
You've got the phone right away with the main specs again with a sticker on there. Moving further in you've got the sim card, ejector tool, a free screen protector external hard case, that's open on the sides manual warranty and this weird one dollar bill kind of thing. I don't really know what this one dollar bill thing is, but I like it, it's cool I'll, keep it. Thank you. You've also got included the charging brick and a micro USB cable.
I know it's 20 21. What are we doing with micro USB guys? Next, let's move on to the build quality and the design on this. The unit that we have is the black colorway, with a sort of snakeskin diamond design to it at the back, which looks pretty nice, it's a very cheap feeling to be honest in the hand kind of on the bulkier side as well, because we've got that massive battery on the inside and that huge screen as well at the bottom. You've got a 3.5 mm, jack micro, USB input and a downward facing speaker. This is a single firing speaker by the way on the right.
You've got the power button, as well as the volume rockers and on the left. You've got the sim card tray with the external memory card slots now moving on to the back of the device, that's where you have the camera module, as well as the fingerprint scanner. Let's now take a look at the display on this: we've got a 6.82 inch, IPS get display with 720p in resolution. We get 90 hertz of refresh rate at 180, hertz of touch sampling rate, hot sampling rate is pretty much how quickly it responds and recognizes your touch on the display at the given massive size of the display. The resolution of 720p isn't as terrible as I thought it would be.
I mean it would be great to have 1080, but I think for a gaming phone you'd rather have the 90 hertz of refresh rate, which this does have with that being said, the viewing angles for an IPS panel aren't as terrible as other budget devices. I've tried out even mid-range devices. The viewing angles from certain angles can get a little dim and washed out, but overall it's much better performing than others. The colors are quite vibrant and punchy, and overall the contrast levels as well were pretty good for me, even in bright light situations, direct sunlight, I didn't have a very hard time. Looking at the display in terms of software and UI.
This is the first time I've used the infinite software, which is the Los 7.6 based on android 11. The UI looks clean and straightforward to navigate through a lot of adjustments can be made, but it also does come with a fair bit of bloatware, but the navigation through the different menus, the little touches they have to the physics when you scroll up and down, and has this little animation, um pretty nice, not the best skin that I've seen for android, but it's decent and usable for the price point. As far as security goes, you get a fingerprint scanner located at the back of the device. The location of it, in my opinion, is slightly too high. Even for medium-sized hands like mine, reaching the top of the device can be a bit difficult, because this is a larger device.
The accuracy of the fingerprint sensor is pretty good and that's also quite fast in unlocking now moving on to performance and gaming. I'm sure a lot of you are here just for that, because that's pretty important on a budget device claiming to do a lot. You get the hello g85 chipset, with four gigs of ram and 64 gigs of storage. The performance on this for the price point was oddly way better than I expected, even compared to other devices within the same price range. The gaming felt perfect, with no lag or stutter at all.
Settings that I ran in Call of Duty mobile was medium graphics and high frame rate. This was the max setting that you can do and that can be pretty good performance. Honestly. I would rather compromise on graphics for games like Call of Duty than frame rate, and the fact that this has a 90 hertz refresh rate panel as well, really gave me a very pleasant, smooth gaming experience. That being said for multitasking and navigation through different menus with up to five applications open, I think it was five or six.
I got pretty okay performance, anything beyond that. You might see a little of stutter, but for the most part using it for like two weeks as the daily driver. I didn't have that much issue navigating to different maps. I'd have a few hiccups here and there when I'd use social media applications, but overall it was a pretty good multitasking experience. Now I do have to mention the gaming comes with its very own gaming mode, called DAR link, not darling, but, like DAR link, I don't know why they called it that, but that's supposed to drop their memory for every other application and dedicate it specifically for gaming, mute notifications, all that kind of stuff um not very different from playing it traditionally, but it helps keep the phone a little cooler because I would say one of the issues that this phone does have is that it heats up a little so yeah.
It does heat up a little when you use it for long intensive hours, whether that's for using the camera for long term or gaming on it for long term. Speaking of the camera, this moves us to the camera testing side of things. It's a triple camera setup, even though it looks like four cameras, but it's a triple camera setup. You get a main 48 megapixel camera, a two megapixel depth camera as well as an AI camera. Don't ask me what AI camera really means, because there's no option to switch between the regular and the AI.
It's just AI camera all around, but it does shoot 48 megapixel stills. If you turn that mode on now. The images that come out of this are actually perfect. You get high dynamic range, pretty good contrast, levels and decent amount of saturation, not over saturated or under saturated there's, a lot of AI modes integrated here as well, some for the beauty modes with the portrait which has decent head separation, the portrait mode, beautification filter, whatever works a lot better than the regular portrait mode, which is a bit weird but yeah. You can see the difference there uh when you turn on beautification.
It has this sort of spotless, uh skin texture thing that it does to your face- and I haven't seen many other smartphones do that the video we recently did with Adam logo TV over on his channel for the Oppo a74 kind of reminds me of this one as well. The skin processing is just really, really good with these newer devices so yeah, I would say that's one of the stronger features on here. You also get two forward facing flashes LEDs in the front, um and yeah. The performance of it for images is pretty good. Now, moving on to the video side of things, this is where it got very confusing.
The main website of the device itself says that it does maximum of 1080p so does GSM arena. But when I was shooting with the phone it gave me the option to shoot in 2k, which is what you're watching right now, which is what I've shot these videos with. So I don't know whether that's upscaled to 2k or that's native 2k. It's a bit weird that the website doesn't have that, because even my laptop recognizes this as 2k footage. Lastly, we move on to the battery.
Like I said you get a huge 6, 000 William hour battery the charge. Time on this is quite slow, as you would expect such a big battery to fill up, but even the charge speed that it supports is on the lower side, but battery performance it'll give you at least a day and a half uh, even two days of use, if you use it moderately so battery wise, definitely a very good choice if you're looking for better battery bodies, if you're looking for bigger battery phones, bigger battery phones, bigger battery phones, that brings us to what I think about this phone and who it's really. For now. The hot NS is definitely one of the better budget devices that I've ever tried. I've tried out a lot of Poco devices and Xiaomi devices recently within the budget category, and I would say this performs a little better than those the screen size.
The colors of the display 90 hertz panel, huge battery life and even the camera outperforming some devices that are meant to be more camera focused, makes this a really, really good smartphone. So, if you're in the market for a gaming phone with a pretty big battery life- and you can watch movies and content on this may be a great option for you sure it may heat up a little and may not have the best speakers but overall for the price range, I do think it's one of the best devices out there, so infinite really great job. We're looking forward to trying out more devices from you guys. Thank you guys for watching. We'll see you again in the next video.
Source : ProductNation