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Do gaming smartphones really make sense in 2025?

Do gaming smartphones really make sense in 2025?

Hindustan Times05-06-2025
If you've scrolled through social media lately, you've probably seen ads for gaming smartphones promising turbocharged performance, RGB lights, and 'pro-level' cooling. But do these devices actually make sense for most people, or are they just flashy toys for a niche crowd? Let's break it down with a real-world comparison and a few hard truths.
Take the RedMagic 10S Pro+ and the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra. Both are 2025 heavyweights, but they're built for different audiences. The RedMagic 10S Pro+ is unapologetically a gaming phone. It packs a Snapdragon 8 Elite processor, a dedicated cooling fan, shoulder triggers, and a 144Hz display. It's a device that screams 'Let's play!' every time you pick it up.
The S25 Ultra, on the other hand, is Samsung's latest flagship. It's got the same top-tier chipset, a stunning AMOLED display (though capped at 120Hz), and a camera that makes even average sunsets look cinematic. It's sleek, versatile, and built for everything, gaming included. While both pack serious power under the hood, the RedMagic 10S Pro+ is all about pushing gaming to the limit, whereas the Galaxy S25 Ultra balances high-end performance with everyday versatility. Aesthetic aside, there are very few distinctions between the two phones.
Here's the catch: Most popular mobile games, think PUBG Mobile, Call of Duty, Genshin Impact, run smoothly on any recent flagship. These games are designed to work across a range of devices, not just the most powerful ones. Sure, a gaming phone might squeeze out a few extra frames per second or keep the phone cooler during marathon sessions, but for the average player, the difference is barely noticeable. The experience will not differ between a gaming smartphone and a flagship smartphone in real world scenarios.
If you're into emulators or running console games from the past, gaming phones do have an edge. The RedMagic's built-in cooling and gaming-centric software can keep performance stable during long sessions, and those shoulder triggers make retro shooters and racing games feel more authentic. That said, any phone with the latest Snapdragon or equivalent chip can handle most emulators just fine. The real advantage is in sustained performance and comfort, not raw power.
Before you buy a gaming phone, ask yourself how you actually use your device. If you want a phone that doubles as a camera, productivity tool, and entertainment hub, a flagship like the S25 Ultra is the smarter choice. You'll get better cameras, longer software support, and a more polished experience.
But if you're a serious mobile gamer. Someone who plays for hours, streams gameplay, or loves customizing every aspect of your gaming setup, a phone like the RedMagic 10S Pro+ can be genuinely fun. The extra cooling, physical triggers, and high refresh rate display do make a difference in long, intense sessions.
For most people, a flagship phone is more than enough for gaming and everything else. Gaming smartphones are for the true enthusiasts, the ones who want every possible edge and don't mind a phone that looks like it belongs in a sci-fi movie. If that's you, go for it. For everyone else, your next flagship will handle all the games you throw at it, and then some.
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