Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro Malaysia Review: The best affordable mid-range phone now? By KLGadgetTV

By KLGadgetTV
Aug 21, 2021
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Xiaomi Redmi Note 9 Pro Malaysia Review: The best affordable mid-range phone now?

We, like the Redmi Note 9s, when it first came out for 899 ringgits, the phone performed tremendously in almost every aspect, but it seemingly has a better bigger brother in the Redmi Note 9 pro for 200 ringgit extra is the Redmi Note 9 pro worth getting over the note 9s for seemingly better specs on paper. Well, let's find out the Redmi Note.9 pro shares a lot with its sibling. It's got the same 6.67 inch, full HD, plus IPS lcd that isn't spectacular, but it gets the job done. I also need to note that the colors and brightness on this display is on the dollar side. It's also got the same punch camera in the middle, which may be a hit or miss for some, but it doesn't really hinder in my content, consumption experience, speaking of content, consumption, audio quality on this phone is quite good. It's really loud and doesn't crackle at maximum volume.

Meanwhile, highs are crisp, and the base is decent too. Next, let's talk about the phone's, build it's quite bulky and on the heavier side for a 2020 smartphone, but it will fit in the pocket. Just fine, the almost mirror-like back panel is a fingerprint magnet, but a phone case would cover it anyway. So don't worry, then there's the camera bump, which is kind of obvious, but it's not really obnoxious again. The phone cover will fix it.

Just a little speaking of cameras. Let's talk about photography, the Redmi Note 9 pro has a 64 megapixel main lens, an 8 megapixel, ultra white shooter, a 5 megapixel macro lens and a 2 megapixel depth sensor when it comes to regular shots. Images are bright and sharp, however, colors are over saturated, especially in the leaves and the bushes here. The sky also looks just a little overexposed with 64 megapixel mode. You obviously get more details in your images, and they're sharp enough to make huge prints of your photos.

It doesn't make much of a difference when it comes to social media. It's still a neat feature to have, however, when it comes to nighttime photography, regular mode actually does fine, but night mode, definitely brightens up the image quite a lot, but sometimes you do get a yellowish tint on your images, but you know what it performs better than the Redmi Note 9s, which had a 48 megapixel sensor instead, but produced images with more noise than the note 9 pro when using 64 megapixel mode at night, images turned out surprisingly: okay, there's added noise in the images sure, but if there is just a little of light, the camera will actually make do with what it has quite well, but for sharper images. I would still recommend you using the regular mode with night mode turned on when it comes to portrait shots for objects. The background subject: separation is quite good, but on human subjects the both does chip away at the hair just a little. Lastly, we kind of selfies the 16 megapixel front.

Shooter here does well, but it's not spectacular. The default beautification setting can be a little much, but you can always tone that down the both. Selfie mode is also good, but the blur does look a little unnatural and can eat up bits of hair too, but overall, it's a decent selfie setup under the hood. The Redmi Note 9 pro also has the same snapdragon 720g chipset as the Redmi Note 9s, although it's not as powerful as a flagship chipset. It's snappy enough when browsing the phone on top of that it runs mobile games quite well with minimal stuttering, we've seen this before on the Redmi Note 9s, and that phone of course ran well, so we're glad the chipset remains in this phone to keep the price low without sacrificing performance too.

Much. Also like the Redmi Note, 9s is the massive 5020 William hour battery that'll last you for a couple of days with heavy browsing, some navigation and gaming as well. But, unlike the note 9s, this phone actually supports 30 watts of fast charging and the 33 watt. Charger also comes in the box. It'll take about an hour to fully charge the phone, but you do have to remember that this is a large battery.

So it's expected. This phone has a side mounted fingerprint scanner for unlocking your phone. It's snappy, and I quite prefer this over the in-screen scanner. Instead, the Redmi Note 9 also ships with android 10, with mini 11 layered. On top, it's a hit or miss when it comes to aesthetics, but mini 11 is a no-frills, straightforward interface that is easy to use.

At the end of the day, the Redmi Note 9 pro, I think, is more worthy of being your daily driver compared to the note 9s, thanks to faster charging speeds and better cameras, especially in nighttime for the extra 200 ringgits that it's asking for. I think it's worth paying, especially since it comes with a very capable chipset and offers really great content. Consumption experiences as well. But let us know what you think: do you think extra 200 ringgits is worth it for you for just better cameras faster charging, or would you just go for the Redmi Note 9s, which in its own right is a very good smartphone as well? Let us know down in the comment section below remember, to give us a thumbs up subscribe, and it's victor signing off bye.


Source : KLGadgetTV

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