It’s a midrange gaming device positioned exactly where the Infinix GT 30 used to be. ZTE Nubia Neo 5 Pro even has the same Dimensity 7400 SoC. It has an aggressive design. And this newcomer installs shoulder triggers on the side, which is something only gaming devices offer. This is everything you need to know about the Neo 5 Pro.

The screen is 144Hz. This is a gaming phone, so the higher the refresh rate, the more advantage a player has in the game. It’s also an OLED panel. It should have deep, inky blacks and very accurate colors. Neo 5 Pro is a 6.8” device with a 1.5K display resolution.
Gamers also need responsive touch. The newcomer’s Magic Touch 3.0 will help you there. This little feature has AI mistouch detection. Accidental touches shouldn’t be an issue here. This is all part of the ZTE new Neo mobile MyOS 16 firmware. The default OS is Android 16.

A Dimensity 7400 chip pulls the load here, and it’s sitting under a huge 4083mm² VC chamber. That ought to cool down this chip under full gaming load. They also added a Z-axis linear haptic motor to its main board. It has tactile vibration feedback.
By the way, they’ve wired this chipset to 12GB RAM. At least the memory won’t be a bottleneck for this SoC. Buyers can either go with 128GB or 256GB storage here. Nubia Neo 5 Pro pushes sound from two speakers at the top and bottom. They call it the DTS X Ultra stereo system.

Two lenses can be seen on top of an RGB LED. Those cameras are 50MP main and 2MP secondary. There’s a third camera on the screen, which is a 16MP sensor. It’s a usable imaging system, but it’s clearly not a priority for the Neo 5 Pro. They’ve included a 6,210 mAh battery inside the Neo 5 Pro.
It will last one and a half days with ease. But constant gaming will drain the phone in hours. WiFi 6 is also part of its essentials, with a fingerprint reader and a hardware gyro sensor. Nubia Neo 5 Pro debuted in the Philippines today for only ~$250 (~PKR 69,000).