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Review Overview
Display
9/10
Performance
8/10
Back Camera
8/10
Design and Build
9/10
Front Camera
7.5/10
Audio and Haptics
7/10
Battery
8/10
Value for Money
9.5/10
Infinix Zero 30 is a well-rounded package with formidable camera capabilites. There are no serious compromises but Infinix could surely work on the optimization side of things.
Infinix Zero 30 Review: Specifications
- Body: 164.5 x 75 x 7.9 mm, 185gm
- Display: 6.78-inch AMOLED, 144Hz refresh rate
- Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
- Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 8020 (6nm Mobile Platform)
- Memory: 8/12GB RAM (+ Up to 9GB Virtual RAM), 256GB storage
- Software & UI: XOS 13 on top of Android 13
- Rear Camera: Dual – 108MP primary, f/1.7, 1/1.67”, OIS – 13MP ultrawide, f/2.2, 120° FOV – 2MP depth, f/2.4
- Front Camera: 50MP, f/2.5 (punch-hole)
- Audio: Stereo speakers, Speaker Hub
- Security: In-display fingerprint sensor
- Battery: 5000mAh with 68W fast charging
Infinix Zero 30 Review:
Design
The Infinix Zero 30 just feels fantastic in the hand. It’s sleek and this vegan leather variant that I have feels premium to the touch as well. Infinix has also gone with quite a bold look for the camera module, and I found it to be pretty lightweight at just 183 grams. It's still a big phone, but overall I’m really impressed with the hands-on feel of this thing. Sadly there isn’t any sort of IP rating but I guess we can’t expect everything from a midrange phone in the first place.
Display
- 6.78-inch FHD+ AMOLED panel
- 144Hz refresh rate
- 10-bit colors, 950 nits peak brightness
Speakers and Haptics
- Stereo speakers with DTS
Performance
- Octa-core MediaTek Dimensity 8020 5G SoC (6nm)
- 8/12GB LPDDR4X RAM, 256GB UFS 3.1 storage (fixed)
- Android 13 (XOS on top)


Gaming
If we are talking about gaming, however, the story takes a slight turn. Due to the slim form factor, the Infinix Zero 30 is not the best at dispersing heat. As such, the phone quickly throttles the CPU which isn’t great for gaming. It isn’t to say you can’t game on the Zero 30, just that you’ll be sacrificing some fps for the sake of everything else. Even then, the phone does get noticeably warm, especially on the front and around the camera module.

Camera
- Triple camera setup at the back
- (50MP main, 13MP ultrawide, 2MP depth)
- 50MP selfie camera (hole-punch)
4k 60 fps
And as I mentioned before, its biggest highlight is the ability to record 4K 60 fps videos from both primary and selfie cameras. Which is something no other phone in this price range can do, by the way. And after taking a lo...t of video samples, what I found is that its 4K 60 fps footages during daytime are pretty decent actually. https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL7tXsx5AWCeD1op8-7I5B_Uw-jDMZeQzD You can notice some minor jitters every now and then and it doesn’t drown out the ambient noise that well, but there are plenty of details and the overall stabilization isn’t nearly as bad as I expected. I also won’t suggest you recording at 60 fps at night when there isn’t enough light since the videos turn out quite noisy.Daylight
Likewise, I compared its cameras with the Galaxy A34, which is one of the best camera phones under 30,000 currently. And in terms of videos itself, it turns out that the Infinix Zero 30 doesn’t quite match Samsung’s level of stability and exposure handling at practically every resolution. But I’m a little surprised to see how well it’s doing against Galaxy A34 in the photography department. During the day, photos from both phones come out nice with a good amount of details. Infinix does need to work on its color processing as its images are a bit warmer but overall, it’s not too bad.Portraits and Selfies
As for portraits, the Galaxy A34 earns an easy point. Not only does it have better edge detection and color processing, but the Infinix Zero 30 tends to add a pinkish hue to the subject’s face which I am not a big fan of. Its selfies also leave a lot to be desired as the Galaxy A34 handles skin tones miles better.Lowlight
But the Zero 30 is a champ when it comes to lowlight photography. There’s not much shutter lag and they have more details and better dynamic range than A34.Battery and Charging
- 5000mAh with 68W fast charging

Infinix Zero 30 Review: Conclusion
To wrap things up, I think the Infinix Zero 30 is a great overall package for the price that pushes the boundary for smartphone cameras in the midrange arena. Especially in terms of videography. It does under-deliver on its promise of “stable, shake-free videos every time”, but I hope this encourages the competition to follow suit in the future anyway. There are also a couple of optimization issues for Infinix to sort out but all in all, the Zero 30 makes a lot of sense under 25,000 rupees. I’ll admit — this segment does have a few other compelling options like the Motorola Edge 40 Neo(review) and the iQOO Z7 Pro as well — but it easily stands out against the competition. Mostly through its videography abilities.Infinix Zero 30 Review: Pros and Cons
Pros
- Good value for money
- Capable Camera Setup
- Powerful chipset
- Smooth 144Hz OLED display
Cons
- Thermal throttles quickly
- Software optimization could be better





