The Poco X3 Pro’s camera will be an upgrade over almost every budget and mid-range phone from previous years. The huge circular camera island looks obnoxious in my opinion. This coupled with the large Poco branding dual color tone of the phone doesn’t appeal to my taste. I like minimalistic designs and the Poco X3 Pro is the opposite of minimalism. However, gamers shouldn’t buy it if gaming is not their primary concern.
So with heavy use expect a full day without too much fuss with the Poco X3 Pro. Another hardware improvement is a Z-axis linear motor for vibration feedback.
- In our Poco X3 review, we will share our experience and give you a better view of where it stands compared to Realme 7 Pro (review) and Galaxy M31s (review).
- That said, the global go url version I’m using does have the feature, so this particular limitation is only for the Indian model.
- To top it off it does get plenty bright for reasonably good outdoor visibility.
- No phone under INR 20k is truly impressive when it comes to photography.
- Not everyone will find this phone comfortable to use, especially one-handed, because of its bulk.
Known as one of the best price/performance devices in its segment, the POCO X3 NFC is very impressive. POCO X3 NFC is a smartphone developed by POCO, a subsidiary of Xiaomi. It was released in September 2020 and is part of the POCO X series of phones. There are millions of POCO X3 NFC users and they enjoy using their smartphones. Recently, MIUI 14 has been on the agenda for many models. With new features like face verification protection, privacy watermarking, and fraud prevention, Xiaomi has endeavored to make MIUI 13 more secure for end-users.
One click on the zoomed-in image opens the original in a new window. The first image shows the scaled photograph of the test device. The Xiaomi Poco X3 Pro isn’t equipped with 5G, but it offers a solid 4G frequency coverage that should be sufficient to use the device in Germany. Wireless connections are stable and reliable in the test.
Elsewhere, the macro camera is functional but its 2MP resolution won’t let you do much with the images. The quality is decent enough though the telltale signs of oversharpening persist. You’ll find a volume rocker and power button on the right side of the phone. The former has a slightly spongy feel to it that doesn’t instill confidence. The power button, on the other hand, doubles up as a fingerprint scanner. It’s perfectly responsive in day-to-day use, and it makes for a much better solution than a less reliable in-display fingerprint reader.