This is the Smartprix review of the Realme 8. And here are the figures and facts that we are about to make sense of. Page Jumps

Realme 8 Design and DisplayRealme 8 Audio, Calls, and ConnectivityRealme 8 CamerasRealme 8 Helio G95, Realme UI 2.0, and 5000mAh battery

Realme 8 Unboxing

USB Type-C Cable5V6A Charge AdapterSIM Card NeedleScreen Protect FilmProtect CaseQuick Start GuideThe Phone, of course.

And here’s the OOBE.

Realme 8 Design and Display

Realme 8 sports a slim and sleek profile with a dual-tone finish at the back. Ours is the Cyber Black variant. Although the entire surface is specular (and easily smudgy), the right-side strip is slightly diffusive and you get to see a rainbowy reflection on it based on the angle and amount of light. Yeah, there’s a big bold Dare To Leap branding. While it may come across as self-indulgent and gaudy for a minimalist like me, you may like the catchy catchphrase. Rest, there is a camera quartet, the arrangement of which is neat. ALSO READ: Samsung Galaxy A52 Review Underneath the display lies a fingerprint scanner. This one, albeit fast but has been a little finicky to read my prints. Gladly, the face unlock is there to swiftly open the doors. Tying it all together is a metal railing across the perimeter. This offers good grip. Even the volume and power knobs on the right are easily reachable and tactile. The left end is left just for the 3-card slot. Rest of the peripherals comprise of a 3.5mm jack, USB-C port, multi-mic system, and a single audio outlet.

Realme 8 Audio, Calls, and Connectivity

The speaker output is decently loud with just serviceable details. A 3.5mm jack is a redeemer in such cases. On the software side, you get equalizer settings, whose results were ambivalent to my ears. Speaking of which, the earpiece and mic system pass the test. As for connectivity, if you face any issue, resetting the network settings is a troubleshooting step worth following. I was getting slow WiFi speeds initially for some reason and this did the trick. Incidentally, Realme 8 bags all the essential options for the price such as dual-band WiFi, Bluetooth 5.1, dual 4G VoLTE, VoWiFi, etc. Moving on…

Realme 8 Cameras

The rear camera stack consists of a 64MP main shooter, an 8MP ultrawide lens, a 2MP macro snapper, and a 2MP B&W clicker. Now while the latter two are nothing worth writing home about, we will be a taking look at the results from the others. We will see about the role the software treats and tricks has to play here. The same holds true for the 16MP selfie camera. Here are the samples to make and heads and tails — With proper light, the camera can produce quite pleasing photos. Unless you juxtapose it against the results from a rival, you would find no glaring issues here, barring some cases of oversharpening. The ultramode offers a 119° field of view bringing in more things into the frame. Not so much detail-wise. There is tonal difference too. Next, let’s welcome indoor shots with some noise. The digital crop-based zoom is handy for reading words at a distance. But, when the scene goes darker, the nightscape comes to the rescue. It stitches together a much detailed and better exposed result.
Then there are night filters to play around. The camera and post-processing do an okay okay job at handling humans. The AI beautification was turned off by default and skin-softening was under control. But that pertains to the skin features only. When it comes to tones, it was noticeably shifting between bracketed shots. Auto-HDR too can make human compositions look garish. As for portraits, the various fun bokeh effects should make up for a hit n’ miss edge detection. In some instances, if you peep, you can see color bleed around the edges of the subject. Before jumping to the next section, know that the 4K30 fps videos from the rear are fairly stabilized, the starry mode isn’t here at the time of writing this review, and slow-mo clips are passable for party tricks.

Realme 8 Helio G95, Realme UI 2.0, and 5000mAh battery

Finally, Realme updates both the software and the skin on top. Realme 8 runs on Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0. It is both good to see and use. Loaded to the teeth with features that really enrich the experience. This includes Dual Mode Music feature, granular Dark Mode settings, Private Space, Subtitle Stitching, QR-based WiFi sharing, Multiple Profiles, System Cloner, Super Power Saving Mode, and a deluge of personalization and multi-tasking options. ALSO READ: Oppo F19 Pro+ Review Still, there are some things that might irk the Power users and minimalists amongst you but are solvable. For eg: Turn off Lockscreen Magazine and Get recommendations for stopping unwarranted interferences. Then there is the bloat situation. I don’t mind pre-installed apps as long as they’re uninstallable and don’t cause redundancy. Case in point – two file managers and two photo galleries on the Realme 8. The good thing is that you can get rid of them using this guide. The regular interaction with the phone, jumping between dozens of apps, browser tabs, casual gaming, etc takes place without a major hitch. I played Asphalt 9 (at highest graphics), Call of Duty Mobile (~50-60 fps at high graphics and max frames), and the 8gigs worth of animated adventure through the world of Genshin Impact (~24 fps). It was only in the latter that I felt the system struggling. With heavy titles and large downloads, you’d feel it getting warm. That’s perhaps an act of the MediaTek machinery inside. The Helio G95 with Mali-G76 GPU, 8gigs of RAM, and 128GB of storage is pushing out respectable performance, after all. Here are some usual synthetic tests I ran: Like the row above shows, the phone is easily a full-day runner in the dint of the 5000mAh Li-ion cell inside. The bundled 30W charger is also adept at quickly refilling the tank. I also appreciate the optimized night charging feature within the Battery Settings in the software. At last, it’s time to bring it all of this into context.

Realme 8 Review Verdict: Should you buy?

So in conclusion, Realme 8 endows a svelte (in both size and scale) design, optimal gaming performance, nimble software with ever-more features, a dependable battery situation, AMOLED visuals, and plenty of enjoyable photo modes to play around with. All these make for a fine phone (especially in the case of the base variant). You could buy it from Flipkart if your budget is less or around 15K. That said, the phone isn’t breaking any new grounds here. Moreover, it’s only when you get into the weeds, you find it missing a few things such as a high refresh rate and stereo speakers. Now if you care about these things, then that could put the Realme 8 behind the eight ball. Pros

Svelte designOptimal gaming performanceFeature-rich Android 11 softwareDependable battery lifeAMOLED displayVersatile camera experience

Cons

Only 60Hz refresh rateAverage speakers

Q. Does Realme 8 support carrier aggregation? A. No, the Realme 8 doesn’t support carrier aggregation. Q. What is the protection offered on Realme 8 display? A. Realme 8 comes with ASG DT Pro Dragon Tail Glass protection on its display. Q. What is the screen refresh rate of the Realme 8? A. Realme 8 screen refresh rate is just 60Hz. Q. What are the SAR values of Realme 8? A. Realme 8 SAR values are: 1.124 W/kg @ 1gm (Head) & 0.694 W/kg @ 1gm (Body). Q. Does Realme 8 support dual-band WiFi? A, Yes, Realme 8 supports dual-band WiFi (2.4GHz + 5GHz). Q. Does Realme 8 support VoWiFi or WiFi calling? A. Yes, Realme 8 does feature VoWiFi. A. Realme 8 has DRM L1 certification and you should be able to HD stream on Prime Video and Netflix.

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