Realme C11 Unboxing and Review By YugaTech

By YugaTech
Aug 14, 2021
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Realme C11 Unboxing and Review

What's up guys joey here, if you attack and for the past couple of years the Realme c series has been one of the most bang for your buck devices out there for budget centric consumers, we've seen the Realme c1, c2 c3, and now we're kicking off the second half of 2020 with the new realm c11, which is actually positioned lower than the realm c3, further, adding another layer to the hierarchy of realm. Well, how does it stack up? Let's find out unboxing their signature, bright, yellow box? We are first greeted by the accessory packet, which holds your user manual, sim ejector tool and normally a free jelly case, which doesn't seem to be the case over here with our unit. Next we have the unit itself, the 10 watt charging brick with real me, signature, accents and a matching micro, USB cable for charging right from the get go. The Realme c11 can almost be mistaken for a more premium phone. We have a large 6.5 inch display a thickness of 9.1 millimeters and comes in at a weight of 196 grams, which feels very comfortable to hold in the hand the unit we have now comes in pepper, gray, but there's a more colorful green version as well. Looking at the front, the realm c11 has a mini drop notch design, which is beginning to look a little dated since a lot of entry level.

Phones are starting to adopt the punctual camera layout. It also has a very noticeable bezel by the chin, but with this screen size we don't think you'll be having much of a problem, but the lack of a notification light might bother some people. Another thing that might bother you is the lack of corning grilled glass protection, but we do get a pre-installed screen protector, which is a good thing to say the least. Now heading to the back. We have a polycarbonate rear panel that features a textured finish, which helps maintain grip of your phone as well as to avoid unnecessary fingerprints.

This particular colorway, along with its updated rear camera module, vaguely, does remind us of the Samsung Galaxy s20 series. But what does capture more attention? Is that smooth vertical strip with the realm logo that lines up along with that beautiful, looking rear shooter, which we think is a really nice touch on the left, sits here? Dual NATO sim card tray, along with a dedicated micro, SD card slot for expandable storage. While on the right we have your power button and volume rocker, the top is nice and clean, while at the bottom we have a rather dated micro, USB port for charging, the primary mic loudspeaker and thankfully a 3.5, millimeter, headphone jack, checking out the display. We got a 6.5 inch IPS panel running at a resolution of 1560 by 720, which equates to 270 PPI colors are nice and vibrant, even without OSI vision effect found in the more expensive, Realme and Oppo phones? Viewing angles are decent and show good contrast, especially when watching multimedia content at maximum brightness. The realm c11 is very usable in harsh lighting.

Situations like when you're outdoors and for a phone with a 720p display output is still quite sharp from a normal standpoint, but you will start to see some pix elation when you get really close to the screen. Frankly, it's still quite a reasonable looking display, especially if screen resolution is not so important to you, audio wise, the c11 utilizes, a single downward firing speaker, which performed alright. As expected, there isn't much bass which is okay. Since again, this is an entry-level phone. But if we're talking about loudness and clarity, the c11 definitely passes with flying colors for entry-level smartphone standards for cameras.

The c11 has a total of three. We get a dual rear setup, consisting of a 13 megapixel primary sensor and the 2 megapixel depth sensor in front. We get a 5 megapixel sensor for selfies. Unfortunately, there is no option to change the quality of photos in the settings, but video recording does let you change the resolution from either 720p to 1080p shots taken with the rear. Camera aren't bad, especially with HDR turned on.

We get decent. Looking images with a nice pop of color portrait mode using the main shooter, also works well, but could use a little more work when it comes to subject background separation with all beauty, enhancements turned off, selfies were average and would sometimes come out blurred when you take your shots too quickly. Switching to the front camera's portrait mode works much better, though, with more sharpness, better contrast and, of course, that nice both effect that everybody loves. After taking a few shots, it looks like the realm c11 performs best from the close to mid-range distances with ample amount of lighting, as noise becomes quite apparent when you're either trying to shoot something from afar or when in dark environments, we do have nights cape and pro mode as well so night, shots are still achievable. To some extent.

The c11 has a native image output of 4160x3120 pixels, with no setting to change this in the default camera app. We have a choice of shooting at either 720 or 1080p at 30fps when it comes to video recording, quality of which is enough for casual use, since this doesn't have any form of stabilization. You're going to have to keep your hands steady. If you want those smooth shots running the software department is real mini based on android 10. Realme has really come into their own with their own spin and color OS, while it still generally feels like the skin is based on its previous OS.

Real mini is a delight to use thanks to its fluidity, security and useful features like really share. Pre-Installed applications include the standard google suite, as well as realm's native applications, including realm link and game space. It's nice to see a clean home page from factory default, with not a lot of bloatware upon initial startup. When it comes to storage out of 32 gigabytes, total 12.8 gigabytes is taken up by system files, leaving you with only 19.2 gigabytes of usable space. But then again you can always insert a micros card up to 256 gigabytes of expandable storage, since the c11 doesn't have a fingerprint scanner.

The only layer of security we have is face, unlock, which surprisingly works. Well, even in dark environments at the core of the c11 is a MediaTek hello, g35 chipset, with the power VR GE, 8320 GPU, along with 2 gigabytes of ram and 32 gigabytes of eMMC 5.1 storage. However, the unit we have here for review is a special edition of the c11 that comes with three gigabytes of ram. Therefore, our benchmark results might be higher than the ones you'd get on the standard retail version anyway. Performance is sufficient for most basic tasks like social media and other light apps.

When it comes to multitasking the low amount of ram takes it stole when several things are happening in the background at once, but if you're not the type to juggle through different apps, it should work just fine when it comes to gaming. The hello g35 has already been proven to be able to handle some gaming, but don't expect anything like high graphics settings and super smooth gameplay, as there will be times, you'll encounter some stuttering, but these are the things you're going to have to expect for a phone of this caliber by default. Call of Duty, mobile and PUBG mobile run quite smoothly on the lowest graphics quality, both on medium frame rate settings, while less graphically demanding games like mobile legends and temple run 2 runs quite effortlessly on this device. For reference as to how the c11 performs check out the benchmarks horse, we got here for power, it comes with a 5, 000, William or battery with support for 10 watt charging. This huge capacity, combined with the lower resolution screen and power efficient chipset, provide an easy 2 day.

Battery life charging, however, is slow, given the limited 10 watt power delivery in our standard video loop test, the c11 backed up with a total of 25 hours and 31 minutes of playback making this device a good companion for continuous multimedia consumption, while charging the device up from zero percent took two hours and 58 minutes to reach a full battery. Now for a phone, that's well-designed has great battery life and boasts a very capable entry level processor. The real mesa 11 is a good choice for those who want a well-balanced device that has decent gaming performance for a bargain price. On a separate note, it's already great as it is, but what would have made the c11 all that much more better is, of course an USB type-c port. But then again I guess that's something to look forward to for the next generation.

The realm c11 is priced at 490 pesos and is available in all online stores like Lazada and shoppe. So this has been our full review of the realm c11. What you guys think about this device. Let us know in the comments down below and if you enjoyed this video, please do drop a like subscribe to our channel for more content, hit the bell icon, so you don't miss any future uploads and be sure to visit yugotek. com for the latest tech, news and reviews.

This has been joey and guys always be sure to stay hydrated.


Source : YugaTech

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