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Overkill performance
Overkill performance






overkill performance

When playing League of Legends: Wild Rift on maximum settings, the ROG Phone 5 crushes it, without any frame drops or issues.

overkill performance

There’s little to say bad about the ROG Phone 5’s performance – its screen is terrific for both gaming and Netflix, and its speakers support either task very well. I went three days without having to charge this phone once, and when I did, it was fully charged within an hour. In terms of battery, it takes about 10 minutes of gameplay in Call of Duty: Mobile on the highest available settings for the phone to drop 3%, and it takes about 20 minutes of the phone being on standby to drop 1% in battery life. You’d expect all of these things from a premium smartphone absolutely, and at its $1,600 price point, it’s a necessity. It swipes fine, installs apps quickly, boots fast and doesn’t have long wait times. All of this said, its impressive specs are very over-the-top, and you’d likely never even notice the performance difference between this phone and other premium phones, even when gaming.įor daily use, the ROG Phone 5 acts flawlessly. It shouldn’t come as a surprise considering it’s purpose-built for high-performance gaming, but you can trust that this phone can do anything you’d want it to do. The ROG Phone 5 has brilliant performance, perfect for mobile gaming and crushing anything else, like social media use or casual music listening. Right now, only a handful of games are capable of 144Hz gameplay, on top of the handful of games that are capable of 120Hz gameplay, so it’s difficult to call the 144Hz screen essential for mobile gaming. That being said, the 144Hz refresh rate is certainly overkill.

overkill performance

Using a 144Hz refresh rate with a 1080 x 2448 resolution on an AMOLED display, you’d be hard-pressed finding a better screen for mobile gaming. The screen is absolutely one of the highlights of the ROG Phone 5. Facial recognition is a treat as well and works instantly. When holding it with one hand, I found it difficult to press my thumb on the under-screen thumbprint reader, but overall it’s perfectly functional.

overkill performance

It’s quite a large phone, as wide as an iPhone 11 with an extra half an inch in height, and the handset sits in your hands well when you’re gaming. Aesthetically, it’s reminiscent of extravagant gaming PCs, with RGB lighting on the back included, and metallic red and blue details all over the chassis (on the back, the SIM card slot and the standby button). The ROG Phone 5’s intent is clear – it’s a phone for gamers, from the design to the performance. Incredible gaming and basic use performance

#Overkill performance pro#

RGB lightning dots on the back and a graphic-displaying screen on the Pro model.Available in Phantom Black or Storm White.Night, panorama, portrait, time-lapse and slow-motion camera modes included.Triple rear camera setup (64MP main + 13MP ultrawide + 5MP macro).Fingerprint and facial recognition for unlocking.Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 5G processor, Adreno 660 GPU.Available with 128GB storage 8GM RAM, 128GB 12GB RAM, 256GB 12GB RAM or 256GB 16GB RAM (on the Pro model).$1,599 AUD RRP (available from JB Hi-Fi, Dick Smith and online retailers).Here’s what you can expect from the ROG Phone 5: While the phone excels in speed, gaming performance and visuals, its features feel like overkill, making it not likely a good pick for the average phone user or gamer, writes Zachariah Kelly. The ROG Phone 5 pulls no punches in being one of the best performance phones out there, and is intended for high-spec gaming with an obvious phone design for gamers.








Overkill performance