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Realme 9 Pro+ Impressions: A Cool Comeback?

Realme released its first number series phone for 2022—the Realme 9i—about two months. The company then followed it up with the relatively more premium Realme 9 Pro and the 9 Pro+ back in February. And now, the Realme 9 Pro+ is all set to make its Nepali debut on March 17. Here’s our early impressions or a mini-review of sorts of the Realme 9 Pro+ after having used it for a couple of days.

Realme 9 Pro+ Specifications:

  • Body: 73.3 x 160.2 x 7.99mm, 182 gm, Glass back, Plastic frames
  • Display: 6.4-inches Super AMOLED panel, 90Hz refresh rate, 360Hz touch sampling rate, Gorilla Glass 5, Up to 600 nits brightness (HBM)
  • Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 409 PPI, 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 920 5G (6nm mobile platform)
  • CPU: Octa-core:
    – 2x Cortex-A78 (2.5GHz)
    – 6x Cortex-A55 (2.0GHz)
  • GPU: Arm Mali-G68 MC4
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 128/256GB UFS 2.2 storage (fixed)
  • Software & UI: Android 12 with Realme UI 3.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple (with LED flash);
    – 50MP, f/1.8 Sony IMX766 1/1.56″ sensor, OIS, EIS
    – 8MP, f/2.2 Sony IMX355 ultrawide sensor, 119º FoV, EIS
    – 2MP, f/2.4 macro lens, 4cm fixed focus
  • Front Camera: 16MP, f/2.4 Sony IMX471 sensor (hole-punch cutout)
  • Audio: Dual stereo speaker, Dolby Atmos audio, 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: Optical in-display fingerprint sensor (with heart rate monitor), Face unlock
  • Sensors: Accelerometer, Light, Proximity, Gyro, Magnetic induction
  • Connectivity: Dual-SIM (Nano), WiFi 6 a/b/g/n/ac/ax (Dual-band), Bluetooth 5.2, GPS / AGPS / Glonass / Beidou, USB Type-C, 4G LTE (VoLTE), 5G
  • Battery: 4500mAh with 60W SuperDart charge (65W power adapter provided)
  • Color Options: Sunrise Blue, Aurora Green, Midnight Black
  • What’s inside the box: Realme 9 Pro+, Transparent case, SIM ejector, 65W power adapter, USB-A to USB-C cable
  • Price in Nepal: Rs. 41,999 (6/128GB) | Rs. 45,499 (8/128GB)

Realme 9 Pro+ Impressions:

Right off the bat, the Realme 9 Pro+ is quite similar to the Xiaomi 11i Hypercharge in terms of overall specs, so it’s going to be interesting to see how these phones fare against each other.

Realme 8 Pro - Design 1
Realme 8 Pro

Anyway, if you roll back a year, the Realme 8 Pro was heavily criticized by many for being a “not so good” value for money product, especially at a time when Xiaomi released its blockbuster phone, the Redmi Note 10 Pro Max. But I genuinely think that the company has made a comeback with the 9 Pro+. And it looks quite promising for Realme.

So, starting off with the things I have liked about it so far, the first thing that comes to my mind is the design. I have always been a fan of the compact form factor on Realme phones. And courtesy of its relatively smaller 6.43-inch screen, that trend follows with the 9 Pro+ as well. As a result, it doesn’t feel too heavy or too wide to use.

No more “DARE TO LEAP”

Plus, Realme has also included a glass back here. We are used to seeing plastic back on the company’s budget and mid-range phones, so this is some quality of life improvement that I actually appreciate. And because of this glass back, it feels much more premium than last year’s Realme 8 Pro.

Plus, I think Realme has learned its lesson against including big “Dare to Leap” branding at the back. There’s only a subtle Realme logo on the bottom left this time.

Realme 9 Pro+ - Design

On the other hand, you might find this glossy back panel with reflective, shimmering glitter attractive, but I would have preferred a matte finish instead. The frames are still plastic, but the slight curves on the back help with the grip a lot. In my limited use so far, I’ve also liked its weight distribution and the minimal thickness, which according to Realme is the lowest ever in the number series.

Decent display

Upfront, the Realme 9 Pro+ features a Gorilla Glass 5-protected AMOLED screen with a 20:9 Full HD resolution and a 90Hz refresh rate. As expected, it comes with Widevine L1 certification alongside HDR10+ support. I have watched a couple of YouTube and Netflix videos so far without coming across any issues with HDR processing, contrast levels, or even brightness.

Realme says this display has a maximum brightness of 600 nits, which is a tad bit lower considering today’s standard, although I found its brightness to be adequate enough even under a bright ambiance. Complementing the display are the dual stereo speakers with Dolby Atmos and Hi-Res audio support.

Realme 9 Pro+ - Display

They can get quite loud and the overall sound quality is pretty good as well. This screen also brings a 360Hz touch sampling rate, but it doesn’t feel as responsive when I’m typing and such. It seems that the phone enables the full 360Hz mode only when explicitly boosting the touch sensitivity to High under games.

But what’s certainly not inferior is the in-display optical fingerprint sensor here.

It’s incredibly fast and thanks to the phone’s overall compact form factor, unlocking with one hand is a lot easier as well. Additionally, this fingerprint sensor can even be used to monitor your heart rate. All you have to do is, go to Realme Labs → Heart Rate Measurement → and then place your finger on the fingerprint sensor for 15 seconds.

I compared its measurement against my Apple Watch Series 7 and their results were quite similar. But I would have preferred a standalone app for it though. Talking about apps, the company has included a lot of bloatware apps here. Luckily, most of them can be uninstalled!

What about performance?

Performance-wise, we get MediaTek’s latest Dimensity 920 chipset along with up to 8GB of DDR4X RAM and up to 256GB of UFS 2.2 storage. We have seen the same configuration in Xiaomi 11i Hypercharge as well, so you can expect similar performance between these phones.

MediaTek Dimensity 920 5G

In case you’re unaware, the Dimensity 920 5G is a good midrange chip and is comparable to the Snapdragon 778G. Anyway, I played PUBG Mobile on the Realme 9 Pro+ for a few minutes where it could hit a stable 40 fps under HDR graphics and Ultra frame rates. Likewise, you can lower the graphics to Smooth and frame rates to Extreme to enjoy a smoother 60 fps gameplay.

Not the most powerful phone for gaming

However, the limitation with a mid-tier chipset like Dimensity 920 is reflected well on more graphics-hungry games like Genshin impact where I noticed slight lags at the highest settings. Hence, I have to keep it at 30 fps for stable gameplay.

So, if you are more into gaming, I would suggest you get Snapdragon 870-powered phones like the Xiaomi Mi 11X, Poco F3, or the iQOO 7 at more or less the same price as this phone.

Realme 9 Pro+ - Vapor Chamber Cooling

As for the thermals, Realme says it has used a Vapor Chamber Cooling System on the 9 Pro+ which significantly reduces the temperature and keeps the phone in a high-performance state for a longer period. However, because it is so compact and thin, I have faced some heating issues. Be it gaming for more than 10 minutes or charging the phone, the phone is slightly vulnerable to heat.

In my throttling test, the CPU throttled to 94% in 15 minutes and to 91% after 30 minutes. On the contrary, Xiaomi 11i Hypercharge with the same Dimensity 920 processor didn’t throttle at all. In Realme’s defense, it does have a better GIPS—i.e. higher performance. So, what Realme is doing here is offering better performance at the expense of greater heat dissipation.

50MP Sony IMX766 camera with OIS

Moving on, the biggest “competitive advantage” for the Realme 9 Pro+ seems to be its cameras.

Realme 9 Pro+ - Cameras

Here, the company has included a 50MP Sony IMX766 sensor with OIS, which is present in much more expensive phones. Likewise, you get an 8MP ultra-wide-angle lens and a 2MP macro camera.

I haven’t had the chance to click too many photos, but with OIS on board, the 9 Pro+ can capture photos with better sharpness and details than the Xiaomi 11i Hypercharge.

Even in terms of dynamic range, highlights, and exposure control, in most of the images that I have clicked, the ones from Realme are fuller and superior.

The Pixel influence

The portraits look very good on the Realme 9 Pro+ as well. It maintains a good skin tone and the background looks nice too. It seems to me that they have taken a slight inspiration from the Pixel phones when it comes to portraits.

For nighttime photography, I roamed the streets of Kathmandu to click photos of temples and stupas and they looked good for the price too. All in all, the Realme 9 Pro+ feels like a good camera phone for the price. But I will be running it through more tests to give you a solid verdict.

In terms of videos, the resolution option here ranges from 720p, 1080p, to 4K—although 4K resolution lacks the 60 fps option. And it looks like Realme has also disabled OIS at 4K resolution since the 4K/30fps footages aren’t that stable—while that doesn’t seem to be the case for 1080p videos.

Finally, the Realme 9 Pro+ comes with a modest 4500mAh battery that supports 60W fast charging. Since it has lived in my pockets for just about a day now, I haven’t had the chance to test its endurance properly.

Anyway, Realme says you can expect its battery to go from 0 to 100% in 54 minutes with the onboard charger which isn’t that fast compared to the competition—but that’s not a deal-breaker in any way.

Realme 9 Pro+ Impressions: Final Words

So that was it for our initial impressions of the new Realme 9 Pro+. To note, it certainly isn’t the most powerful phone you could find for the price. But Realme is heavily leaning on the design and camera side of things to deliver an overall balanced package instead. We are coming up with the full review of the Realme 9 Pro+ pretty soon so watch out for that as well.

  • Check out our unboxing and impressions video of the Realme 9 Pro+

POCO M4 Pro 4G Impressions: (Almost) A Clear Winner!

This is our early impressions of the new POCO M4 Pro 4G. By the way, there’s already a 5G variant of this phone that launched way back in November 2021, by the way. Considering the competition, the M4 Pro 5G delivered decent performance and didn’t sacrifice a whole lot to bring 5G connectivity either. So what could POCO do with a cheaper 4G variant of the phone?

POCO M4 Pro 4G Specifications:

  • Body: 73.8 x 159.8 x 8.09mm, 179.5 gm, Plastic build quality
  • Display: 6.43-inches Super AMOLED panel, 90Hz refresh rate, 180Hz touch sampling rate, DCI-P3 gamut, 1000 nits peak brightness, Gorilla Glass 3
  • Resolution: FHD+ (2400 x 1080 pixels), 409 PPI, 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: MediaTek Helio G96 4G (12nm mobile platform)
  • CPU: Octa-core:
    – 2x Cortex-A76 (2.05GHz)
    – 6x Cortex-A55 (2.0GHz)
  • GPU: Arm Mali-G57 MC2
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 64/128GB UFS 2.2 storage (upgradable)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with Xiaomi’s MIUI 13 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple (with LED flash);
    – 64MP, f/1.8 primary sensor
    – 8MP, f/2.2 ultrawide lens, 118º FOV
    – 2MP, f/2.4 macro lens
  • Front Camera: 16MP, f/2.45 sensor (hole-punch cutout)
  • Audio: Dual stereo speaker, Hi-Res Audio, 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Security: Side-mounted fingerprint sensor, Face unlock
  • Sensors: Accelerometer, Ambient Light, E-compass, Gyroscope, Proximity
  • Connectivity: Dual-SIM (Nano), WiFi 5 a/b/g/n/ac (Dual-band), Bluetooth 5.0, GPS / AGPS / Glonass / Beidou, USB Type-C, 4G LTE (VoLTE)
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 33W Pro fast charging (power adapter provided)
  • Color Options: Cool Blue, Power Black, POCO Yellow
  • What’s inside the box: POCO M4 Pro 4G, Transparent case, SIM ejector, 33W power adapter, USB-A to USB-C cable
  • Price in Nepal: N/A (INR 14,999 for 6/64GB)

POCO M4 Pro 4G Impressions:

Well, there are a few upgrades and a couple of obvious downgrades here—most notably in the performance department—to meet that lower price point. Talking about price, the POCO M4 Pro 4G starts at INR 14,999 for the base 6/64GB variant while the specced-out 8/128GB model goes for INR 17,999.

There’s even a flat INR 1,000 bank discount as an introductory offer, which makes it a really appealing budget phone. As per our sources, this phone is set to launch soon in Nepal as well. I’ve been using it for a couple of days now and this is my initial impressions, or rather a mini-review, of the new POCO M4 Pro 4G.

The ergonomics… hot damn! 

Now, holding the phone in my hands, I’m immediately impressed by its design.

POCO M4 Pro 4G - Design

I mean… yes, POCO could have gone with a matte finish to prevent smudges and dust build-up at the back of the phone but besides that, the M4 Pro’s ergonomics is rock solid. I like how these slight curves at the back make handling the phone so easy, whereas it is also complemented by flat frames with a matte finish for that modern kick.

This all-plastic build quality doesn’t feel cheap, hollow, or any of those things either. At 179.5 grams, POCO says this is its lightest M-series phone yet but the M4 Pro still retains excellent heft and weight distribution.

Both power and volume rockers are placed on the right frame here, and reaching them with one hand wasn’t much trouble for me. The power button doubles as a fingerprint reader too—and it’s quite fast and responsive as you’d expect.

poco M4 Pro 4g is even IP53 certified against dust and splash damage, which is always nice to see on a phone in this price range.

POCO has also included an IR blaster, 3.5mm headphone jack, and stereo speakers, so you’re getting the whole package here. Unlike the M4 Pro 5G, its Z-axis linear motor has a fairly strong, loud, and “buzzing” feedback which makes the typing experience pretty enjoyable. While I prefer fluid, precise haptics myself, the M4 Pro’s vibration feedback is more than fine for a budget phone.

A great phone for your binge-watching sessions

Besides the great design, this is also an amazing phone for content consumption. POCO has upgraded to an AMOLED display this time, which is a major improvement over the IPS LCD panel on the M4 Pro 5G.

POCO M4 Pro 4G - Display 2

Protected by Gorilla Glass 3, this 6.43” Full HD screen delivers great colors thanks to the wide DCI-P3 gamut and pitch-black contrast with inky blacks and bright whites. Its viewing angle is equally great with no noticeable off-axis color shift. The phone is also Widevine L1 certified for HD playback on OTT platforms like Netflix, but do note that this budget phone lacks any form of HDR playback.

Moving on, I have no issue with the brightness on this thing though. POCO says the M4 Pro 4G achieves 700 nits under the High Brightness Mode (HBM)—whereas it can hit a peak brightness of 1000 nits.

This AMOLED upgrade doesn’t come at a sacrifice of a higher refresh rate or Always on Display support either. Because I’ve used a loooooot of phones with a 120Hz refresh rate, this 90Hz screen doesn’t feel all that special to me but if you’re coming from a regular 60Hz display, the M4 Pro’s smoothness is bound to be a visual treat.

And it’s adaptive as well, meaning the screen intelligently switches between 60 and 90Hz to save battery. Unfortunately, this display is subject to micro-stutters and jitters—which is something we’re well familiar with budget and mid-range phones from Xiaomi and POCO with a high refresh rate. This is most vividly noticeable once you’re scrolling through your Google Feed.

Is the chipset to blame for the micro stutters?

Other than this, I also noticed micro stutters when going over my apps on the POCO launcher and occasionally even when scrolling through a website on Chrome or opening the recent apps screen. It’s not that the POCO M4 Pro 4G has an incompetent chipset or anything since the Helio G96 powering the phone is equipped to handle up to 120Hz FHD displays. Hopefully, a fix is on the way!

MediaTek Helio G96 - 120Hz Support

Complementing this display is a set of stereo speakers, where the earpiece doubles as the secondary speaker unit. The M4 Pro gets fairly loud enough and is fine for listening to podcasts or binging your favorite shows. And there’s not much distortion at the max volume either. But the audio sounds almost flat when playing something with a high dynamic range as it boosts the mids and high frequencies over everything else.

How’s the performance then?

On to the performance of things, the POCO M4 Pro 4G is powered by MediaTek’s Helio G96. Apart from the aforementioned issue of micro-stutters, this 12nm chip handles usual everyday tasks pretty well. With 6GB RAM even in the base variant, you can expect a decent multitasking experience too. I usually juggle between 5-6 apps at a time and the M4 Pro managed to keep them in memory just fine.

Seems like Xiaomi has really improved RAM management with MIUI 13. It does come with a bunch of bloatware apps and games but you can uninstall most of them. However, the M4 Pro is still on Android 11 and not the latest Android 12-based MIUI 13. Although it’s more than likely that this phone will get the Android 12 update, that’s about it.

I don’t think Android 13 is on the cards for this budget phone.

And whatever happened to POCO UI, right? POCO had confirmed its custom UI to arrive by the end of 2021 but we’re well into 2022 and it’s still a no show.

Xiaomi MIUI 13 - Global

Regardless, you can enjoy some casual gaming on the POCO M4 Pro 4G. PUBG Mobile maxes out at HD graphics and High frame rates but I prefer the stable 40 fps gameplay under Smooth graphics and Ultra frame rates instead. Yet, this 12nm chip does show its thermal inefficiency as the phone gets warm quite quickly.

After just 8 minutes into the game, I clocked the CPU and battery temperature at 42 and 38°C respectively. Relatively less taxing games like Asphalt 9 and Mobile Legends play without any frame drops either.

Decent cameras (wait what?)

On the other hand, it brings a triple camera array at the back consisting of a 64MP primary, an 8MP ultrawide, and a 2MP macro shooter housed inside this wide camera island. Upfront, there’s a 16MP selfie camera inside the hole-punch cutout.

POCO M4 Pro 4G - Back Cameras

Now, apart from the cameras, the POCO M4 Pro 4G is pretty much identical to the Redmi Note 11S. So if you’re conflicted between these two phones, I’d suggest going for this one because of the cheaper price tag. Plus, the 108MP camera on the Note 11S isn’t going to make a whole lot of difference for the additional money anyway.

Normal, Ultrawide Images

Here, the main 64MP shooter actually takes decent photos with a good amount of details and saturation, contrast levels—even though the overall shot comes off warm.

The ultrawide camera introduces a cooler hue instead but there’s not much detail to talk about here.

Portrait Images

Portrait photos have acceptable edge detection but it messes up the subject’s skin tone rather horribly. You can notice the unnatural pink tint alongside a hint of beautification on its portrait shots.

Selfie Images

It’s the same with the selfie cameras too. What’s worse is that Redmi and POCO phones with a MediaTek processor have always struggled with maintaining a good skin tone—so I doubt a future update is going to solve this!

Nighttime Images

Low-light photos are pretty impressive on the M4 Pro with decent exposure control. With Night Mode turned on, you can get well-balanced photos with greater highlights, details, and reduced noise as well.

In terms of videos, both the front and the back camera is limited to 1080p 30 fps recording—exactly like the POCO M4 Pro 5G and the Redmi Note 11S. As you’d expect, the videos are of strictly average quality with slight wobbles.

What to expect in terms of battery life

Finally, there’s no upgrade in the battery department this time since you’re getting the same 5000mAh cell that supports 33W Pro fast charging.

Under medium usage consisting of taking a bunch of photos/videos, streaming Netflix and Twitch, browsing the web, alongside some gaming every now and then, I managed to get around 7 hours of screen on time here. Pretty amazing stuff! As for charging, the phone can climb from 0 to 100% in a little over an hour.

POCO M4 Pro 4G Impressions: Final Words

Wrapping it all up, I think the POCO M4 Pro 4G is a great budget phone. Especially with that bank discount I talked about earlier (not sure the phone will launch at a similar price in Nepal though). Sacrificing 5G connectivity, it brings an AMOLED display which makes it an impressive device for multimedia consumption. And its battery life is pretty remarkable as well!

Sure there are a bunch of rough edges that POCO has got to sort out, like optimizing the cameras, responsiveness of the 90Hz refresh rate, and the Android 12 update thing. Nonetheless, that doesn’t keep the M4 Pro 4G from being a good budget phone under INR 15,000.

  • Check out our unboxing and impressions video of the POCO M4 Pro 4G. 

Asus ROG Flow X13 2021 with Ryzen 5000 H-series CPU launched in Nepal

Asus has launched the 2021 iteration of the ROG Flow X13 gaming laptop in Nepal. It’s a 2-in-1 laptop powered by AMD 5000 H-series processors and GeForce RTX GPUs. In this article, we will go through the specs, features, availability, and official price of Asus ROG Flow X13 2021 in Nepal. 

Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) Overview:

Design and Display

The Flow X13 is an ultra-thin gaming laptop with a convertible design. It sports a 13.4-inch IPS LCD display that has 4K resolution, 16:10 aspect ratio, and 60/120Hz refresh rate. Similarly, it’s a touch-screen with Pantone validation, stylus support and covers 85% DCI-P3 color gamut. 

Asus ROG Flow X13 2021 Design and Display

Furthermore, the 360° hinge here enables users to use this laptop in three different modes: tablet, stand, and tent. It has a backlit chiclet keyboard and houses a 720P HD camera on the top bezel. 

Performance

In terms of performance, Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) comes in two different CPU configurations—either AMD Ryzen 9 5900HS or Ryzen 9 5980HS. The latter variant is called the Supernova edition.

These processors are paired with either GeForce RTX 3050 or RTX 3050Ti or GTX 1650 graphics. All the GPUs come with 4GB of DDR6 VRAM with 35W TGP that can reach 40W in Dynamic Boost.

Asus ROG Flow X13 2021 with XG mobile dock

If you are not content with the GPU onboard, ROG Flow X13 even supports XG mobile docking station—an external GPU (eGPU) dock—which comes with GeForce RTX 3080 GPU at 150W TGP.

Over on the memory front, ROG Flow X13 comes with up to 32GB LPDDR4X RAM and 1TB of NVMe SSD storage. Fueling the device is a 62Whr cell that charges via a 100W AC adapter. As per Asus, it can charge 50% battery in just 30 mins. 

Rest of the specs

Moving on, the I/O option includes a 3.5mm audio jack, an HDMI 2.0b, a USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-A, one ROG XG Mobile Interface, and two USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (w/DP and PD) ports. Likewise, it utilizes WiFi 6 (802.11ax) and Bluetooth 5.1 for wireless connectivity. 

Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) Specifications:

  • Display: 13.4-inch IPS touchscreen, 360º hinge, 120Hz, Pantone validated, Stylus support
  • Resolution: WQUXGA (3840 x 2400 pixels), 16:10 aspect ratio
  • Keyboard: Backlit chiclet
  • CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 5900H / Ryzen 9 5980HS
  • GPU: Up to Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 Ti
  • RAM: Up to 32GB LPDDR4x (2 x SO-DIMM)
  • Storage: 1TB NVMe SSD
  • Audio: Dual speakers, Dolby Atmos, Hi-Res Audio
  • Webcam: 720P HD
  • Security: Fingerprint scanner
  • Battery: 4-cell 62Wh Li-ion
  • Power Adapter: 100W USB Type-C
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax), Bluetooth 5.1
  • Ports: 1x 3.5mm audio jack, 1x HDMI 2.0b, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-Am 1x ROG XG Mobile Interface, 2x USB 3.2 Gen 2 Type-C (w/ DP, PD)

Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) Price in Nepal and Availability

Asus ROG Flow X13 has finally launched in Nepal with a price tag of Rs. 238,888. For the price, you get a 120Hz panel, Ryzen 5900HS, RTX 3050 Ti, 16GB RAM, and 1TB SSD.

If you buy Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) from Nagmani-authorized stores you will get two years of warranty, a laptop sleeve, and a mouse for free.

Asus ROG Flow X13 (2021) Price in Nepal (Official) Availability
13.4″ WUXGA 120Hz, Ryzen 9 5900HS, RTX 3050 Ti, 16GB RAM, 1TB SSD Rs. 238,888 Nagmani
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of the Asus TUF Dash F15 2021. 

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) with 2K touch screen, 11th Gen Intel CPU official in Nepal

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Huawei has finally launched the MateBook 14 (2021) in Nepal. The notebook brings a sleek design, 2K “FullView” display, and an active cooling system. Here, we will be discussing the key specs, official price, and availability of the Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) in Nepal.

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) Overview

Design and Display

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) is primarily made out of metal. The laptop is fairly lightweight at 1.49 kg and is just 15.9mm thick. It is available in sole Space Gray color options.

Huawei MateBook 14 2020 AMD Design

Opening the lid, you are greeted with a 14-inch 2K screen with a 3:2 aspect ratio. It’s a FullView Display based on IPS technology. It even has 100% sRGB coverage and 10-point multi-touch. The display is also TUV Rheinland certified against blue light emission.

Performance and Memory

Under the hood, MateBook 14 (2021) packs the 11th Gen Intel Core i5-1135G7.  It is a quad-core CPU with 8 threads and a maximum turbo frequency of 4.2 GHz. There is an active cooling system consisting of Huawei Shark fins and dual heat pipes. The base laptop variant of the laptop comes with 8GB of RAM and 512GB of SSD.

Huawei MateBook 14 2021 Cooling

Rest of the Specs

Huawei MateBook 14 2021 features a 56Wh lithium-polymer battery. The company even includes a 65W USB-C charger in the box.

The laptop features two USB 3.2 Gen 1 ports, one USB-C port, one HDMI port, and a 3.5mm 2-in1 headphone jack. It has two speakers and four microphones.

Huawei MateBook 14 2021 Ports

Other notable features include the recessed camera, fingerprint sensor (integrated into the power button), touchpad with Huawei Share tag.

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) Specifications:

  • Dimension: 307.5 x 223.8 x 15.9mm; 1.49kg
  • Build: Metal + Plastic
  • Display: 14″ IPS Touch panel; 100% sRGB; 300 nits; 90% screen to body ratio; 178-degree viewing angle; 10-points touch;
  • Resolution: 2160 x 1440 pixels; 3:2 aspect ratio
  • Processor: 11th Gen Intel Core i5-1135G7/ Core i7-1165G7
  • GPU: Intel Iris Xe (integrated)
  • RAM: 8GB RAM
  • Storage: 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD
  • Ports: 1 x USB Type-C (data, charging, DisplayPort), 2 x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A, 1 x HDMI and 1 x 3.5mm headphone jack
  • Audio: 2 x 2W speakers, 4 x microphone
  • Connectivity: Dual-band Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax (2×2 MIMO), Bluetooth 5.1
  • Keyboard: Full-size Backlit chiclet Keyboard
  • Webcam: 720P HD (hidden)
  • Battery: 56 WHr Lithium Battery
  • Charger: 65W USB Type-C charger
  • Color: Space Gray

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) Price in Nepal and Availability

The official price of Huawei MateBook 14 (2021) in Nepal in Nepal is Rs. 1,48,990. It is for the base Core i5 variant with 8GB RAM and 512GB storage.

Huawei MateBook 14 (2021)  Price in Nepal (Official) 
Core i5-1135G7, 8GB RAM, 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD  Rs.  148,990
  • Check out our review of the Asus Zephyrus G14.

Realme launches TechLife Watch S100 with all-day SpO2, up to 12 days battery life

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Alongside the Realme 9 5G and 9 Speed Edition, the company has launched a new wearable, called the Realme TechLife Watch S100. The smartwatch promises up to 12 days of battery life. So, let’s go through the specs, features, availability, and expected price of the Realme TechLife Watch S100 in Nepal. 

Realme TechLife Watch S100 Overview:

Body

Realme TechLife Watch S100 Design and Display

To begin, the Watch S100 features a 1.69-inch color touchscreen with a resolution of 280 x 240 pixels and a peak brightness of 530 nits. It has a metallic housing and is IP68 water-resistant up to 1.5 meters. The Watch S100 weighs 34 grams and comes in two color options—Black and Grey.

Features

The wearable comes equipped with a Photoplethysmography (PPG) sensor for constant heart rate monitoring. It also features a three-axis accelerometer for activity tracking. 

Realme TechLife Watch S100 Sensor

Health and fitness features include 24/7 blood oxygen and heart rate tracking, sleep monitoring, and others. The company has also included a skin temperature measurement feature to monitor the temperature of your wrist and body. There are also 24 distinct sports modes and 110+ watch faces to choose from.

Rest of the specs

The Watch S100 is fitted with a 260mAh cell that is rated to provide up to 12 days of battery life. It connects to your smartphone via a Realme Fit app and supports devices with Android 5.0+ and iOS 11+. 

Realme TechLife Watch S100 Specifications:

  • Dimension: 25.1 x 3.58 x 1.16
  • Design: Metal body, Removable Wrist band
  • Display: 1.69-inches IPS panel, 530 nits 
  • Resolution: 240 x 280 pixels, 218PPI
  • Water Resistance Level: IP68, Up to 1.5 meters
  • Sensors: 3-Axis Accelerometer, Optical Heart Rate, SpO2
  • Sports Mode: 24 different modes
  • Battery: 260mAh
  • Charing Type: Magnetic charging base
  • Color Options: Black, Grey
  • Companion App: Realme Fit (Android | iOS)

Realme TechLife Watch S100 Price in Nepal and Availability

The TechLife Watch S100 is priced at INR 2,499 in India, where it will be available from March 14. We expect the price of Realme TechLife Watch S100 to be NPR 5,000, if and when it launches in Nepal. 

Smartwatch Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
Realme TechLife Watch S100 INR 2,499 NPR 5,000
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of the Realme 9 Pro+.

Realme 9 5G launched with Dimensity 810, 90Hz LCD screen

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Realme announced two new 9 series phones today. It includes the new Realme 9, which brings a new processor and support for 5G connectivity. In this article, we will be discussing the key specs, features, expected price, and availability of the Realme 9 5G in Nepal.

Realme 9 5G Overview

Design and Display

Realme 9 5G comes with a 6.5” 90Hz display, which was not there on last year’s Realme 8. However, the company has also replaced the Super AMOLED screen with an IPS panel. That being said, it still retains the 180Hz touch sampling rate and the left-aligned camera cutout.

The phone is 8.5mm thick and weighs around 188 grams. You can choose between two colors: Stargaze White and Meteor Black.

Realme 9 5G Design and Display

Performance

Under the hood, Realme has gone with the 5G-ready Dimensity 810 5G chipset. In addition to the support for 5G connectivity, it even brings a newer 6nm process which makes it more power-efficient compared to the Helio G95 on the Relame 9i.

The two chipsets feature the same 2x Cortex A76 + 6x Cortex-A55 core configuration. However, the performance cores are clocked a little higher on Dimensity 810. Talking about graphics, Dimensity 810’s dual-core Mali G57 GPU is actually a downgrade from the quad-core Mali G76 on the G95.

Camera

At the back, Realme 9 5G brings a triple camera consisting of a 48MP primary sensor accompanied by a 2MP macro and a 2MP portrait sensor. In contrast, Realme 8 featured a quad-camera setup with a 64MP primary sensor and an 8MP ultrawide sensor. On the front, there is a 16MP sensor for selfies and video calls.

Realme 9 5G camera setup

Rest of the Specs

Fueling the Realme 9 5G is a 5,000mAh battery. The phone charges slower at 18W against its predecessor’s 30W charging. It still boots on Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top. There is a side-mounted fingerprint scanner for biometrics.

Realme 9 5G is available in two memory configurations. The base variant has 4GB RAM and 64GB storage, while the top-end model comes with 6GB RAM and 128GB storage.

Realme 9 5G Specifications:

  • Display: 6.5-inches LCD panel, 90Hz refresh rate, 180Hz touch sampling rate
  • Resolution: Full-HD+ (2412 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: MediaTek Dimensity 810 (6nm)
  • Memory: 4/6GB RAM, 64/128GB storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple camera;
    – 48MP f/1.8 primary lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 B&W lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 macro lens
  • Front Camera: 16MP (punch-hole)
  • Security: side-mounted fingerprint scanner, Face unlock
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 18W SuperDart Charge

Realme 9 5G Price in Nepal and Availability (Expected)

Realme 9 5G will go on sale in India on March 14. There, its price is INR 14,999 for the 4/64GB variant and INR 17,499 for the 6/128GB variant. If it launches here, we expect the price of Realme 9 5G in Nepal to start at NPR 25,500.

Realme 9 Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
4/64GB INR 14,999 NPR 25,500
6/128GB INR 17,499 NPR 30,500
  • Meanwhile, check out our review of Realme 8.

Realme 9 5G “Speed Edition” goes official with Snapdragon 778G, 144Hz screen

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After launching the 9 Pro and 9 Pro+ last month, Realme has added two more phones to its latest number series. Among the two phones announced today, Realme 9 SE is a completely new phone with no direct predecessor. In this article, we will be discussing the key specs, features, expected price, and availability of the Realme 9 SE in Nepal.

Realme 9 SE Overview:

Performance

Realme has justified the Speed Edition moniker by including Snapdragon 778G under the hood. In terms of raw performance, it is even better than the Snapdragon 695-powered 9 Pro. It brings faster Cortex-A78 performance cores (1x 2.4GHz + 3x 2.2 GHz) and a capable GPU in the form of Adreno 642L. However, this chip is based on an older 6nm process.

Though you can choose between 6GB and 8GB of LPDDR4X RAM, you will get 128GB of UFS 2.2 storage on both. Likewise, there is also an option to expand the storage further with an external memory card.

Display and Design

Moving on, Realme 9 SE brings a 6.6” LCD screen with support for a 144Hz refresh rate. This makes it the fastest display in the series. Likewise, the screen is said to switch between six different levels of refresh rate based on the app and content. The screen boasts a 240Hz touch sampling rate and 600 nits of peak brightness.

Realme 9 SE Design and Display

Over on the back, Realme 9 SE has a shining textured design with anti-fingerprint properties. It is available in Starry Glow and Azure Glow color options.

Cameras

In terms of photography, Realme 9 SE brings a triple camera setup. The primary camera here uses a 48MP sensor. Accompanying it is a duo of 2MP sensors for portraits and macro, respectively. Unfortunately, there is no ultrawide shooter here. For selfies, Realme has included a 16MP shooter inside the left-aligned punch-hole display cutout.

Realme 9 SE Camera

Rest of the Specs

Realme 9 SE gets its juice from a massive 5,000mAh battery, and it has support for 33W fast charging. It has a side-mounted fingerprint scanner for biometrics. It even brings support for Wi-Fi 6 and Bluetooth 5.2. The phone still boots on Android 11, which is quite a bummer given all the specs that it offers for the price.

Realme 9 SE Specifications:

  • Display: 6.6-inches LCD panel, 144Hz refresh rate, 240Hz touch sampling rate
  • Resolution: Full-HD+ (2412 x 1080 pixels), 20:9 aspect ratio
  • Chipset: Qualcomm Snapdragon 778G (6nm)
  • Memory: 6/8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 128GB storage (expandable)
  • Software & UI: Android 11 with Realme UI 2.0 on top
  • Rear Camera: Triple camera;
    – 48MP f/1.8 primary lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 B&W lens
    – 2MP f/2.4 macro lens
  • Front Camera: 16MP (punch-hole)
  • Security: side-mounted fingerprint scanner, Face unlock
  • Battery: 5000mAh with 30W SuperDart Charge

Realme 9 SE Price in Nepal and Availability (Expected)

Realme 9 SE will go on sale starting March 14 in India, where it starts at INR 19,999 for the base 6/128GB variant. If it launches here, we expect the price of the Realme 9 SE in Nepal to start at NPR 34,500.

Realme 9 SE Price in India (Official) Price in Nepal (Expected)
6/128GB INR 19,999 NPR 34,500
8/128GB INR 22,999 NPR 40,000
  • Meanwhile, check out our unboxing of the Realme 9 SE.

Huawei MateBook D 15 (2021) is now officially available in Nepal

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Last year, Huawei refreshed its MateBook D series of notebooks with the 11th gen Intel CPUs. The lineup consisted of two laptops: MateBook D 14 and D 15. The latter is now available in Nepal. So, let’s walk through the key specs, official price, and availability of the Huawei MateBook D 15 in Nepal.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Overview:

Performance

Huawei MateBook D 15 is powered by 11th Gen Intel Core i5-1135G7. It’s a quad-core CPU with 8 threads and a maximum clock speed of 4.20 GHz. There is no discrete GPU here, and users will have to rely on the integrated Intel Iris Xe graphics. As for memory, you get 8GB LPDDR4X RAM and 512GB of PCIe SSD.

Design and Display

As the monikers suggest, Huawei MateBook D 15 features a 15.6-inch IPS screen. The FHD screen has a 16:9 aspect ratio and typical brightness of 250 nits. Other than that, it has slim bezels and 178º viewing angles. Plus, Huawei has also attained TÜV Rheinland’s low blue light certification.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Design

This metal chassis is available in two colors – Moon Silver and Deep Space Gray. It measures 16.9mm in thickness and weighs around 1.56 kg.

Battery and Connectivity

As for the ports, you get one USB-C connection with charging support, three USB-A, one HDMI, and a 3.5mm combo jack.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Ports

 

The keyboard on the Huawei MateBook D 15 is backlit and the power button is home to a fingerprint scanner too. One of the keys hides the 720p webcam, which pops up only when you need it.

Huawei MateBook D15 features a 42Wh battery with support for 65W charging.

Huawei MateBook D 15 Specifications:

  • Body: 357.8W x 229.9D x 16.9H-mm, 1.56 kg
  • Display: 15.6-inches FHD (1920 x 1080) IPS, 250 nits
  • Keyboard: Full-sized backlit keyboard
  • Touchpad: Multi-touch supported touchpad
  • Processor: Intel Core i5-1135G7
  • Memory: 8GB LPDDR4X RAM, 512GB NVMe PCIe SSD 
  • Graphics: Intel Iris Xe
  • Audio: 2x speaker
  • Battery: 42 WHr, 65W USB-C power adapter
  • Webcam: 720p HD camera (hidden)
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ax (2×2 MIMO), Bluetooth 5.1
  • I/O ports: 1x 3.5mm mic/headphone jack, 2x USB 2.0 Type-A, 1x USB Type-C (charging supported), 1x HDMI, 1x USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A

Huawei MateBook D 15 Price in Nepal (Official)

The official price of the Huawei MateBook D 15 (2021) in Nepal is Rs. 109,990 for the sole 8+512GB variant. You can buy the MateBook D15 from Huawei-authorized stores in Nepal.

Huawei MateBook D15 (2021)  Price in Nepal (Official) 
Core i5-1135G7, 8GB LPDDR5 RAM, 512GB PCIe NVMe SSD  Rs.  109,990
  • Meanwhile, check out our 2021 gaming PC build for under $1000.

Intel 12th Gen “Alder Lake” Review: Windows 10 vs Windows 11

This is our review of Intel 12th Gen Alder Lake CPU (Core i7-12700K) on Windows 10 and Windows 11. If you’ve watched or read our comparison between the 11th Gen Rocket Lake and 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs, then you know that Intel is back with a bang! To pull this off, the company had to use every trick up its sleeve—from the hybrid core architecture to the new 10nm process node and everything in between.

What’s new with Alder Lake?

By now, you might already be familiar with the said hybrid architecture but in case you’re not, here’s a quick recap.

UNlike every other x86-based intel and amd processor of the past, alder lake is different. in a good way.

Contrary to a homogenous CPU design consisting only of high-performance cores, these 12th Gen CPUs also bring low-power high-efficiency cores into the mix. With this, Intel is promising a significantly more power-efficient workflow alongside improved performance.

Intel Core i9-12900K vs i9-11900K - Performance Per Watt
Image: Intel

For instance, the company claims that the Core i9-12900K delivers the same level of performance at 65W—compared to what the Core i9-11900K manages at 250W! Besides the core layout itself, the new CPU microarchitectures, cache architecture, and a multitude of other factors contribute to the upgrade as well—but you get the gist.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Thread Director

So, to make sure this novel CPU design doesn’t end up misbehaving with the operating system, Intel has worked closely with Microsoft to develop something called “Thread Director” that reportedly yields the best performance on Windows 11.

Intel Thread Director Overview 2
Image: Intel

Basically what it does is give the OS a better view of thread requests and the state of each core to help it decide whether a thread goes to a performance or an efficiency core. According to Intel, Thread Director monitors instructions at a nanosecond level and communicates with the OS on a microsecond level.

Windows 11 - Wallpaper

All this sure sounds fantastic on paper. But if history has taught anything, jumping on the new OS bandwagon this early on is not a good idea. So the question has to be asked: just how good is Alder Lake on Windows 11—if at all? For this, we ran a bunch of benchmark and gaming tests on Windows 10 and 11.

Test system specs

More specifically, all our Windows 10 (Pro) tests were running on the 21H2 version (OS build 19044.1466). On the other hand, our Windows 11 (Pro) machine was also on version 21H2 (OS build 22000.438).

CPU Intel Core i7-12700K
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4
Graphics Card MSI GeForce RTX 3070 Ventus 2X OC (8GB)
CPU Cooler AITC KA-F240 AIO Water Cooler (240mm)
Casing XPG Battlecruiser E-ATX Super Mid-Tower
– 4x XPG Vento 120mm ARGB fans
RAM 2x AITC RAPiDEZ 8GB DDR4-3600 (CL18)
SSD AITC FZ300 M.2 2280 PCIe 3 x4 (1TB)
PSU MSI MPG A850GF 850W (80+ Gold)

In terms of system specs, it’s the same that we used in our 11th Gen-12th Gen comparison. Once again, if you haven’t seen or read that comparison, I’ll highly recommend doing so because we’ve discussed all the nitty-gritty details of Alder Lake apart from its upgrades over 11th Gen there.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Performance

7-Zip

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - 7-Zip

Anyway, looking at the 7-Zip 32MB dictionary compression and decompression, their minimal difference can be simply written off as run-to-run variation. Same with Blender.

Blender Open Data

The BMW render took 1 minute 49 seconds on Windows 11 and a second less on Windows 10. The i7-12700K was slower by a couple of seconds on Windows 11 in the Classroom render as well. Likewise, this CPU completed all Blender benchmarks in 28 minutes and 5 seconds on Windows 10—which is 8 seconds faster than on the newer OS.

Besides render speed, I didn’t find any substantial advantage for this 12th Gen CPU on Windows 11 when it comes to power usage or temperature either. In Blender’s all-core full benchmark test, I clocked the CPU temperature on Windows 10 and 11 and 86 and 88°C respectively—while their power draw was also negligibly different at 186.796W and 188.146W.

AIDA64 Stress Test

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - AIDA64

AIDA64’s stress test yields identical outcomes on both operating systems—with an unthrottled CPU and similar power usage and temperature.

Cinebench R23

Cinebench R23 tells the same story in both single and multi-core benchmarks. Here, this Alder Lake processor’s single-core score on Windows 11 came to 1842—a roughly 1.68% worse result than on Windows 10.

Five minutes into the test, Windows 11 posted about 9.75% cooler CPU temperature although it was marginally behind in terms of power usage.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Cinebench R23 (Multi Core)

The Core i7-12700K was once again slightly better on Windows 10 under the Cinebench R23 multi-core test. Not that it matters at all, but it scored 22527 on Windows 10 and 22372 on Windows 11. Then again, running its multi-core 30 minutes stress test somewhat flipped the results in Windows 11’s favor.

Corona 1.3

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Corona 1.3

Corona 1.3 render test puts it ahead of Windows 10 by a modest 3.08% as well. Wow, I’m almost running out of synonyms for these minute variations.

Handbrake

Thankfully, Handbrake conversion finally shows some meaningful upper hand for Alder Lake on Windows 11—or does it? You see, the i7-12700K completed converting a custom 895MB 4K H.264 file to H.265 in 1 minute and 28 seconds on Windows 10.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Handbrake (Default Priority)

To compare, Windows 11 finished the conversion 57.14% faster at just 56 seconds. Now, based on everything else I’ve discussed so far, this result is suspiciously fast. Further raising our doubts is the fact that this CPU pulled off the 1080p H.264 to H.265 conversion at the exact same time.

Therefore, I manually set Handbrake’s thread schedule priority to “High” from “Normal” for a rematch. Mind you that this is not regulation for most applications or most users—meaning the operating system’s scheduler automatically does it for you. But because Alder Lake introduces a hybrid core architecture that supposedly works better with Windows 11, I thought it was somehow necessary.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Handbrake (High Priority)

And lo and behold, Windows 10 actually completed the 4K conversion in 55 seconds when making this small change. It might be something to do with the scheduler, or this contrast is app-specific entirely—I’m not sure.

V-Ray, Premiere Pro

Moving on, we’re back to the tale of dismissable differences under the V-Ray 5 CPU render where this processor posted 15636 on Windows 11 and 15686 on Windows 10. Our custom Premiere Pro render was also nominally slower on Windows 11.

Time Spy (CPU)

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - Time Spy (CPU)

In a necessary change of pace, the i7-12700K scored 4.56% higher on the Time Spy CPU test on Windows 11.

PugetBench Photoshop

PugetBench’s Photoshop benchmark was moderately ahead on Windows 11 as well.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - PugetBench (Photoshop)

As you can see from the chart, this Alder Lake CPU managed a 1018 overall score on Windows 10 and 1099 in the competition. Besides this, the GPU, General, and Filter scores are also better on Windows 11.

PugetBench Premiere Pro

On the other hand, PugetBench’s Premiere Pro benchmark delivered a mixed outcome.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - PugetBench (Premiere Pro)

While i7-12700K’s results were superior on Windows 11 in terms of the overall score, Standard Export, and GPU—it fell behind on the Live Playback and Effects tests.

SPECworkstation 3.1

Our performance benchmark ends with SPECworkstation 3.1. As the name implies, this is a workstation benchmark that evaluates a system’s performance across various professional applications. Here, Windows 11 achieved its biggest victory on the Media & Entertainment (M & E) CPU test—outclassing Windows 10 by a decent 18.1%.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Windows 10 vs 11 - SPECworkstation 3.1

It was marginally leading in the Product Development (PD) CPU benchmark as well. On the contrary, Windows 10 secured a win in the Life Sciences (LS) CPU test since its 3.64 score is around 2.54% faster than Windows 11’s 3.55.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Gaming

By the way, I kept ray tracing, VSync, and DLSS OFF (wherever available) for all these gaming tests.

CS: GO

With that out of the way, let’s see if Alder Lake is any different on these two OS on the gaming front. Starting with CS: GO, the Core i7-12700K averaged 361.5 fps on Windows 10 and 371.6 fps on Windows 11 at 1080p resolution and Very High settings.

There’s a similar difference when switching to 1440p—whereas the 1% low fps is almost the same between the two operating systems. However, the 0.1% lows are almost ridiculously low on Windows 11 at both resolutions. I didn’t notice any significant frame drops or anything here—but even after multiple tests, the result was indistinguishable.

Forza Horizon 5

Regardless, Forza Horizon 5 has practically the same result on Windows 10 and 11 at either 1080p Extreme or Ultra preset. More importantly, both 1% and 0.1% lows stay at a respectable margin.

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm

But the Civilization VI Gathering Storm AI benchmark favored Windows 10, where Windows 11 was slower by 10.54 and 8.62% on 1080p and 1440p resolution respectively.

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Civilization VI

Cyberpunk 2077

The i7-12700K achieved basically identical scores on GPU-bound games like Cyberpunk 2077 too.

Under 1080p High settings, it managed 105.3 fps average on Windows 11 and 104.3 fps on Windows 10, while bringing it down to Medium graphics bumped those numbers by roughly 20%.

Red Dead Redemption 2

Red Dead Redemption 2 matches this conclusion at 1080p High and Medium settings as well.

Control

Likewise, Control yields 135.2 fps average at 1080p High preset on Windows 11 and 132.2 fps on Windows 10. The results are also comparable under Medium settings—but contrary to CS: GO—the 0.1% lows are far better on Windows 11 here.

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - SOTTR

Moving on, Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s in-game benchmark gave 7.92 and 2.63% higher average fps on Windows 11 at 1080p Highest and High settings.

Hitman 3

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Hitman 3

Hitman 3’s average fps is pretty much the same on either OS, but the 1% and 0.1% lows are considerably better on Windows 11.

Borderlands 3

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Borderlands 3

Similarly, Borderlands 3 manages an average of 109.8 fps under 1080p Ultra graphics preset on Windows 10 and 110.6 fps on Windows 11. But this time, the 1% and 0.1% lows are much worse on Windows 11.

IntelCorei7-12700K - Windows10vs11 - Average FPS Count

Finally, let’s look at the 8 games/14 settings average fps of the Core i7-12700K on the two OS. On Windows 11, we’ve got 168.61 fps—keeping it slightly ahead of Windows 10’s 166.23 fps.

Intel 12th Gen Windows 10 vs 11: Conclusion

All in all, from everything I’ve discussed so far, it’s pretty clear that there’s really not much of a competitive advantage to Intel’s 12th Gen Alder Lake CPUs on Windows 11 when it comes to gaming or creative workloads. Maybe Thread Director’s algorithm isn’t mature enough to deliver the promised optimization on Windows 11—or maybe it was marketed more as Windows 11’s promotion instead.

Intel Core i9-12900K - i7-12700K Box 2

In any case, if your professional workflow runs perfectly fine on Windows 10 and you don’t see any Windows 11-exclusive features or visual overhaul to be that useful, stick with what you have. 12th Gen CPUs are great—but not necessarily on Windows 11. Not yet.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: All Hail Alder Lake!

Before heading into this review of the Intel Core i7-12700K, let’s take a step back to see Team Blue’s journey so far. So, Intel’s 12th Gen “Alder Lake” desktop processors have been around for some time now. The company had faced incredible challenges and setbacks for the past couple of years. But it looks like Intel is finally back to its former glory.

From being stuck on the 14nm node for God knows how long (well we know “Cannon Lake” was supposed to introduce 10nm process node back in 2016) to losing business with Apple, the past couple of years have been especially testing for Intel.

But with the Alder Lake CPUs, Intel has delivered possibly the most substantial generational upgrade ever in the history of the Core lineup of processors. So, it’s crucial that we at least have a basic understanding of just how differently built the 12th Gen CPUs are.

Intel 12th Gen CPU - Highlights
Image: Intel

There’s big.LITTLE hybrid architecture (or “Big-Bigger” as Intel calls it), a new “Intel 7” process node, something called “Thread Director”, and a lot of platform upgrades. Let’s start with the belle of the ball—the hybrid architecture.

Intel 12th Gen “Alder Lake” Overview:

1. Hybrid CPU architecture

Unlike your typical processor with a single, homogenous CPU design, Alder Lake has a hybrid, heterogeneous core architecture. This consists of high-performance ‘P’ cores and high-efficiency ‘E’ cores—based on a new “Golden Cove” and “Gracemont” microarchitecture, respectively.

Such CPU design is pretty common on Arm-based mobile processors. But x86-based Intel and AMD CPUs have been married to the traditional CPU layout with a single class of high-performance cores for as long as there have been Intel and AMD processors.

Technically, Intel did experiment with the hybrid core design in 2020 with “Lakefield”. But they were short-lived and discontinued the very next year of the release. These penta-core CPUs consisted of one powerful “Sunny Cove” core and four low-power “Tremont” cores—and were designed for ultraportable, foldable, and dual-screen devices.

Intel 12th Gen P-cores vs 11th Gen - IPC Uplift
Image: Intel

However, Lakefield CPUs showed up in far-more expensive devices than anticipated and were ultimately outclassed by standard Intel/AMD machines. Getting back to Alder Lake, the ‘P’ cores are your run-of-the-mill performance cores that bring 19% improvement over 11th Gen “Cypress Cove” cores at the same frequency, says Intel.

P-cores vs E-cores

These handle demanding, single-threaded workloads that are time and latency-sensitive—like gaming and video rendering. In other words, the ‘P’ cores share the same foundation as Intel’s past “Core” CPU cores.

On the contrary, the “Gracemont” high efficiency ‘E’ cores are something borrowed from the company’s “Atom” class of low-power Celeron and Pentium Silver-branded processors. So, as you could imagine, the efficiency cores are tasked with all the other requests that are not as demanding—your background tasks and other multi-threaded workloads.

The idea of fusing these two in a single chip is that the aforementioned background tasks will not use up the valuable resources of the high-performance cores, while simultaneously delivering a lot more power-efficient workflow.

Intel 12th Gen E-cores vs Skylake
Image: Intel

According to Intel, these ‘E’ cores manage 40% better performance at the same power level (or same performance while consuming 40% less power) compared to 6th Gen “Skylake” cores in single-thread performance. Do note that the P-cores have hyperthreading enabled and can therefore run two threads per core—whereas the E-cores are single-threaded.

Incredible performance-per-watt

Now, all this sure sounds fantastic for Team Blue. AMD’s Ryzen 5000 series absolutely thrashed the 11th Gen Core processors in terms of power efficiency (besides the embarrassing performance dominance), so the use of low performance-per-watt CPU cores is a change born almost out of necessity.

But the problem arises when the operating system cannot properly schedule threads to the ‘P’ and ‘E’ cores. You can easily guess how terrible a gaming session would go if the OS assigned a game’s process requests to E-cores instead of P-cores.

2. Intel Thread Director

And that’s where the Intel Thread Director comes in. It’s a microcontroller built directly inside the CPU, which monitors each thread and the state of each core—and forwards this information to the operating system.

Kind of like a guard in a panopticon prison.

The OS scheduler then uses this info to decide where each thread goes—either to a performance or an efficiency core. Intel has worked closely with Microsoft to build a scheduler that can recognize the hybrid architecture of Alder Lake processors in Windows 11.

Intel Thread Director Overview
Image: Intel

As a result, Windows 11 has a clearer idea of the P-cores and E-cores—their power and efficiency levels. Conversely, Windows 10 simply recognizes E-cores as lesser capable P-cores—disregarding their performance-per-watt capability for less-demanding workloads. Intel and Microsoft even promise better performance and efficiency for Alder Lake processors on Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Windows 10 vs 11

So just how much of that holds true? Not much, apparently. We ran our Core i7-12700K through a bunch of performance and gaming benchmarks on Windows 10 and 11 where the results were… let’s say less-than-flattering for the new operating system.

We’ll be publishing a separate review about 12th Gen’s performance (Intel Core i7-12700K) on the two OS but here’s a little sneak peek.

Intel Core i7-12700K - Blender - Windows 10 vs 11

The i7-12700K finished the Blender bmw27 render in 1 minute and 48 seconds on Windows 10 and took a second more on Windows 11. Similarly, Windows 11 lagged behind its predecessor by a negligible 3 seconds in Classroom render cycle.

Cinebench R23 paints a similar picture in both single-core and multi-core tests where Windows 10 comes off victorious. They’re neck-and-neck in terms of power draw as well.

Measured after 5 minutes into the Cinebench multi-core test, we recorded the i7-12700K sitting firm at 192W on Windows 11 and 191.280W on Windows 10. On the gaming front too, we didn’t find any compelling argument for Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K - CSGO - Windows 10 vs 11

CS: GO managed an average of 361.5 fps in our 1080p de_dust2 gameplay with a 1% low of 199.4 fps on Windows 10, which marginally falls behind the 371.6 fps average and 201.7 fps 1% low of Windows 11. But there are some surprises and some heartbreaks about Alder Lake’s performance on these two OS, which I’ll be discussing in a separate review.

3. Intel 7

Another big upgrade that Intel has brought with the 12th Gen CPUs is the Intel 7 process node, which is 10nm-based. After being stuck on the 14nm node for desktop processors for multiple generations, this is a welcome breath of fresh air.

Intel 7 Process Node
Image: Intel

Now, you might be wondering why call it “Intel 7” and not 10nm Enhanced SuperFin (10ESF) which is what it really is? I initially dismissed it as a cheap marketing ploy to sell the idea that Intel has moved to 7nm—but the more I looked into it—the more this naming convention made sense.

Turns out, Intel’s 10nm node is pretty on par with TSMC’s N7 (7nm) and Samsung’s 7nm process node. And node names don’t even correspond to the size of a transistor on a chip. Anyway, Intel 7 reportedly brings 10-15% performance-per-watt gain compared to its predecessor.

While Intel’s not winning the power efficiency battle against AMD anytime soon, this is still a pretty big deal. Team Red’s Ryzen 5000 series were already based on a 7nm manufacturing process, and the company has confirmed TSMC’s 5nm technology for the upcoming Zen 4-based Ryzen 7000 CPUs.

Intel 12th Gen: Platform Upgrades

That leaves us with the other platform upgrades introduced with Alder Lake processors.

The most notable of them has to be the DDR5 RAM and PCIe 5.0 support. These CPUs support DDR5 sticks at up to 4800 MT/s alongside DDR4-3200, LPDDR5-3200, and LPDDR4X-4266 standards.

However, motherboards based on the Intel 600 series chipsets will have either DDr5 or ddr4 slots—not both.

So far, the company has announced nine chipsets in this lineup:

Z690 H610 R680E
H670 B660 Q670E
H610E W680 Q670

Unfortunately, Alder Lake uses the new LGA 1700 socket and therefore isn’t compatible with older motherboards—which means the platform upgrade cost for these CPUs will be a lot higher than say going from 10th Gen Comet Lake to 11th Gen Rocket Lake that uses the same LGA 1200 socket.

Therefore, in order to test the performance difference between last year’s Core i7-11700K and the i7-12700K, we went with the Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4 motherboard for the latter.

Test system specs

DDR5 is way too expensive right now, hard to find, and looking at a bunch of reviews, we found that it doesn’t deliver a significant performance jump either. Our motherboard capitalizes on this circumstance as it only supports DDR4 memory. And for our 11th Gen setup, we used the Asus TUF Gaming Z590-Plus WiFi. Here are the specs for both of our test systems:

11th Gen 12th Gen
CPU Intel Core i7-11700K Intel Core i7-12700K
Motherboard Asus TUF Gaming Z590-Plus WiFi Asus TUF Gaming Z690-Plus D4
Graphics Card MSI GeForce RTX 3070 Ventus 2X OC (8GB)
CPU Cooler AITC KA-F240 AIO Water Cooler (240mm)
Casing XPG Battlecruiser E-ATX Super Mid-Tower
– 4x XPG Vento 120mm ARGB fans
RAM 2x AITC RAPiDEZ 8GB DDR4-3600 (CL18)
SSD AITC FZ300 M.2 2280 PCIe 3 x4 (1TB)
PSU MSI MPG A850GF 850W (80+ Gold)

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Specs Overview

Okay, so before moving forward with the review, let’s check out their specs real quick. The Core i7-11700K is an 8-cores, 16-threads CPU with 3.6GHz of base and 5.0GHz of single-core max turbo frequency. Besides, it has 16MB of Intel Smart Cache and a 125W TDP.

On the other hand, the i7-12700K is a 12-core processor with 8 P-cores and 4 E-cores with 20 threads in total. The base frequency of the P and E-cores are listed at 2.70 and 3.60GHz, respectively.

i7-11700K i7-12700K
Socket LGA 1200 LGA 1700
Lithography Intel 14nm FinFET Intel 7 (10nm)
Cores 8 Cores 12 Cores
8 ‘P’ cores, 4 ‘E’ cores
Threads 16 Threads 20 Threads
Base Clock 3.60 GHz P-cores: 3.60 GHz
E-cores: 2.70 GHz
Max Turbo Clock 5.0 GHz P-cores: 5.0 GHz
E-cores: 3.80 GHz
Unlocked Yes
PCIe Version 4.0 5.0, 4.0
Memory Version DDR4-3200 DDR5 4800 MT/s
DDR4 3200 MT/s
TDP 125W Base Power: 125W
Max Turbo: 190W
Cache 16MB Intel Smart Cache 25MB Intel Smart Cache
Graphics Intel UHD Graphics 750 Intel UHD Graphics 770

Moreover, E-cores can hit up to 3.80GHz whereas the P-cores can turbo boost up to 4.9GHz. Or 5.0GHz for a single core through Intel Turbo Boost Max 3.0. Cache memory has also been bumped to 25MB here and the company is even changing its power rating standard with Alder Lake CPUs.

Redefining power nomenclature

Instead of a single TDP value that’s not indicative of the highest power level, these processors have a Processor Base Power (PBP) and Maximum Turbo Power (MTP).

Intel 12th Gen - Power Definition
Image: Intel

In the case of i7-12700K, its 125W base power refers to the power when the CPU is executing workloads at base frequency—while the 190W turbo power is the highest power level at turbo frequencies. This power profile is more commonly called PL2—and it used to be that an Intel processor could sustain its PL2 state for a limited time only.

But the ‘K’ suffixed Alder Lake CPUs are pretty much unshackled from this time restraint. They can therefore stay at their turbo power all the time—given that there’s competent cooling and power supply to back it up.

We ran all our tests at stock speed. but you can get 4-8% higher performance if you choose to overclock this cpu.

Additionally, our OS of choice here is Windows 10 Pro (21H2 – 19044.1466) because of its greater reliability and overall stability than Windows 11.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Performance

7-Zip

So our benchmark test starts with 7-Zip 32MB dictionary compression where the i7-12700K pulls off a healthy 20.35% lead against the i7-11700K.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - 7-Zip x64

The performance gap gets wider on the decompression benchmark. Here, the Alder Lake ends up with 119.401 GIPS (billion instructions per second) compared to 87.679 GIPS on the 11700K.

Blender Open Data

In our Blender all-core bmw27 benchmark, the 12th Gen CPU finished it at 1 minute and 48 seconds whereas the Core i7-11700K took 65 seconds more. Same thing with Classroom where the newer processor wins out by a substantial 57.60%.

Not just performance, but Alder Lake has a considerable advantage in terms of power efficiency as well. While the 11th Gen CPU draws around 218W throughout the render cycle, the i7-12700K consumed roughly 17% less power at 186W.

Cinebench R23

Moving on to Cinebench R23 single-core test, the i7-12700K scored 1873—while the i7-11700K managed just 1544. Because Cinebench bears a linear relation with a processor’s core-count (like Blender), multi-core results are all the more impressive on Alder Lake.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23

More specifically, we’re seeing a whopping 67% better score on the 12th Gen CPU. Although Cinebench R23 isn’t that emblematic of a system’s sustained performance, we still ran a 30-minute stress test to see these processors’ power levels, temperature, and any thermal throttling tendencies.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23 (Power, Temperature)

While it wasn’t taxing enough to cause thermal throttling in either CPU, Alder Lake was once again the more power-efficient of the two—even though the max temperature in both the CPU package was at about 93°C.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - Cinebench R23 (Single Core, Power Draw)

The Core i7-12700K is easier on the power supply in Cinebench single-core test as well, where it was drawing 41.3W power as compared to 51.6W by the i7-11700K.

AIDA64 Stress Test

In contrast, AIDA64 gives us a better view of a CPU’s performance under stress. Mere seconds into the 30 minutes stress test, our 11th Gen processor was greeted with a “CPU Throttling – Overheating Detected” message.

After 5 minutes into the test, we graphed its power level at a colossal 205.465W whereas it got as hot as 111°C at one point. The i7-12700K passes this test with flying colors with no thermal throttling, just a 147.9W power draw, and a peak temperature of 83°C.

Prime95 Stress Test

We also ran the Prime95 stress test for half an hour which pushed both processors to the brink of thermal throttling. Here, the Rocket Lake CPU settled at around 201.93W—but the i7-12700K’s power level was sort of all over the place.

It started at 133W, then went up to 211W after a couple of minutes—only to fall back to 138W in the next 2-3 minutes—and finally found its peace at approximately 215W for the remainder of the test period. Mind you the CPU usage is at 100% at almost all times here—while the P-cores and E-cores throttled by about 300 and 200MHz respectively.

Corona 1.3, V-Ray 5

Next up is the Corona 1.3 benchmark where the i7-12700K is faster by a little over 50%, finishing the render in 1 minute and 7 seconds to i7-11700K’s 1 minute and 41 seconds.

V-ray 5 CPU render tells the same story where Alder Lake outclasses its Rocket Lake predecessor by a staggering 60%!

Productivity benchmarks

On to some real-world tests, the Core i7-12700K finished our Premiere Pro render in custom 1080p H.264 settings in 25 minutes and 58 seconds. This is impressively ahead of the i7-11700K that completed the render in 34 minutes and 51 seconds.

Similarly, when converting a custom 1080p H.264 file to H.265 on Handbrake, the 12th Gen was 35% faster. Weirdly enough, the i7-11700K eked out a feeble victory in 4K H.264 to H.265 conversion—completing the task in 1 minute and 24 seconds which is 4 seconds quicker than what the i7-12700K managed.

Time Spy (CPU)

On the other hand, this 12th Gen processor scored 15,631 on 3DMark’s Time Spy CPU benchmark. That’s 31.7% higher than the i7-11700K’s 11,868.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - 3DMark Time Spy (CPU)

Not that it matters a whole lot, but we also ran a few GPU benchmarks including Unigine Heaven, Fire Strike Extreme, and Fire Strike Ultra—where the i7-12700K was victorious by the tiniest of margins.

Intel Core i7-11700K vs i7-12700K - GPU Benchmarks (RTX 3070)

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Gaming

By the way, I kept ray tracing, VSync, and DLSS OFF (wherever available) for all these gaming tests.

CS: GO

Okay, let’s get into the gaming side of things now. CS: GO averaged at 330.9 fps with 1% and 0.1% low of 198.3 and 125.7 fps under 1080p gameplay at Very High settings on the Core i7-11700K.

The Alder Lake counterpart manages roughly 9% better average fps, while its 1% and 0.1% lows are basically the same as 11th Gen. For some reason, 1440p gameplay yielded even superior results on the Core i7-12700K—although not by much—with a 363.8 fps average and a 1% low of 200.6 fps. The i7-11700K sees a minor dip at 1440p, delivering 317.1 fps on average.

Forza Horizon 5

Likewise, this 12th Gen processor gave a nominal 6% better average fps on Forza Horizon 5 at 1080p Extreme, and 9% higher average fps at 1080p Ultra settings.

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm

Civilization VI: Gathering Storm’s in-game “Gathering Storm AI Benchmark” results are practically the same across the two CPUs. At both 1080p and 1440p High quality. Technically, the i7-11700K’s average turn time is around 5% faster!

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Civilization VI

Shadow of the Tomb Raider

This Rocket Lake CPU was also marginally ahead in Shadow of the Tomb Raider’s 1080p in-game benchmark at the Highest graphics settings. But, the Core i7-12700K regains its momentum with a 5% higher average fps under High preset.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - SOTTR

Red Dead Redemption 2

RDR 2’s results are comparable between these processors at both High and Medium settings since this game is more GPU-bound in nature.

Control

It’s the same with Control as well. The i7-11700K ends up at 132.1 fps average under DX12 1080p High preset compared to 132.2 fps on Alder Lake.

But one thing to note here is that the i7-12700K’s 0.1% low is almost bizarrely low at both High and Medium settings.

Cyberpunk 2077

Finally, Cyberpunk 2077 sings the same song with similar results at 1080p High preset. And an 11th Gen favorable performance under Medium settings.

Anyway, the Core i7-12700K does have better power efficiency even when gaming, circling around the 105W territory on Cyberpunk 2077’s 1080p High preset. To compare, we measured the i7-11700K’s power draw at 134W—which is about 27.6% more.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Cyberpunk 2077 (Power)

Let’s now look at the 6-game 12-settings average fps from these CPUs. As you can see from this chart, the 12th Gen Core i7-12700K leads the i7-11700K by roughly 5.5%.

IntelCorei7-11700K vsi7-12700K - Average FPS Count

Then again, some of the games we’ve tested are CPU-intensive while some lean on the GPU. Meaning, this isn’t the proper scale of performance difference of the said processors.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Conclusion

Wrapping up this review of the Intel Core i7-12700K, it goes without saying that Team Blue is finally… finally back. Pretty handsomely might I add! After being in the doghouse for the past couple of generations of products, Alder Lake is an entirely new chapter in the company’s book.

For this, Intel has conjured up a bunch of innovations—from the hybrid core architecture, a new 10nm process, and all the platform upgrades I discussed earlier like DDR5 and PCIe 5.0 support. Compared to last year’s Core i7-11700K, the i7-12700K brings a tremendous uplift in both single and multi-threaded workloads.

Multi-core performance is especially noteworthy and those four E-cores pull some serious weight. But power efficiency is something that haunts Intel to this day—despite leaving the 14nm node behind at long last.

New socket, who dis?

And if you were thinking of upgrading from your old Intel setup to Alder Lake, then the new socket makes the upgrade a lot more expensive. However, this shouldn’t be that big a deal to someone building a new system entirely.

Intel Core i9-12900K - i7-12700K - Box

Still and all, making the best out of these processors requires DDR5 RAM and Windows 11. Although most Windows 11-related issues have been pretty much resolved by now, at the moment, DDR5 is both scarce and expensive.

Oh God, it’s the GPU shortage all over again!

The good news is that DDR4 is still more than competent enough for most tasks, particularly gaming. At the end of the day, the fact remains that if you’re looking to buy a new CPU right now, then Alder Lake is absolutely the way to go.

The Core i7-12700K easily beats out i7-11700K and even AMD’s Ryzen 7 5800X at almost the same price. That’s insane! And just a few months after its launch, you can already find it at discounted prices; down to USD 385 from USD 409.

Unfortunately, countries like Nepal and India aren’t privy to such price-drops. This CPU currently retails at NPR 72,000 (USD 610) and INR 36,990 (USD 480) in these markets. But if you’re in no rush to get a new CPU, then waiting till the second half of 2022 to see how AMD’s Ryzen 7000 series would be a wise decision.

  • Watch our review video of the Intel Core i7-12700K CPU.

Intel Core i7-12700K Review: Pros & Cons

Pros:

  • Excellent single, multi-core performance
  • Massive upgrade over Core i7-11700K
  • Unlocked, can be easily overclocked
  • Supports PCIe 5.0, DDR5 memory
  • Finally does away with the 14nm process

Cons:

  • Power efficiency still not on par with AMD’s Zen 3
  • Costly upgrade from older Intel systems
  • DDR5 memory costs a fortune
  • Doesn’t ship with a CPU cooler inside the box