Introduction
Xiaomi’s Redmi line has become synonymous with quality Android experience on a budget with a good reason. It is nearly impossible to beat the up and coming Chinese manufacturer’s value propositions, especially if you live in a Xiaomi-covered market.
Better still, the Redmi lineup has been improving, inching closer to mid-tier equipment and features with each generation. In the current fifth iteration, your options break down as follows:
- Redmi 5A
- Redmi Note 5A (Redmi Y1)
- Redmi 5
- Redmi 5 Plus
As usual, there is the positively entry-level Redmi 5A, priced at around €100. Despite the obvious improvements in the low-budget segment, you should still approach smartphones that cost €100 or less with a healthy dose of doubt. To put it simply, the Redmi 5A is underpowered. The same mostly applies to the equally cheap Redmi Note 5A, also known as the Redmi Y1. Unlike its sibling, it does at least have 8 Cortex-A53 cores under the hood but skimps on the trendy wide screen.
Enter the Redmi 5, probably the most sensible cheap option that not only won’t disappoint you but it sports the hip tall aspect ratio look. It can be had for as little as €115 but here’s the caveat. For an extra €15 or so, you can get its bigger sibling, the Redmi 5 Plus. Although a nearly identical package, it comes with a bigger battery, faster chipset and a larger screen of higher resolution. But we’ve already reviewed this one.
Now it’s the Xiaomi Redmi 5’s turn.
Xiaomi Redmi 5 specs:
- Build: Plastic frame, metal back
- Connectivity: Dual SIM (hybrid microSD slot)
- OS: Android 7.1.2 Nougat, MIUI 9.1
- Screen: 5.7″ 18:9 IPS LCD, 720p (282ppi); 503nits of brightness, 2.951 sunlight legibility; Unspecified Gorilla Glass
- Camera: 12MP, f/2.2, 1.25um main (PDAF), 5MP selfie, 1080p video (both)
- Chipset: Snapdragon 450 8x Cortex-A53@1.8GHz (bench: 1,222), Adreno 506 (bench: 9,953)
- Memory: 2GB/3GB of RAM + 16GB/32GB of storage
- Battery: 3,300mAh (sealed)
- Misc: Fingerprint reader; Infrared port; FM Radio
The Plus version will undeniably put a good deal of pressure on the regular Redmi 5, potentially questioning the very point of having so much variety. Then again, we can see a point in Xiaomi trying to offer more choice. €15 might be insignificant when shopping for a flagship, but Xiaomi is not far off the baseline €100 mark and is genuinely trying to squeeze value out of every penny. An admirable effort in our book, as long as it’s not at the expense of the user experience.
So, that is the real question then – has Xiaomi managed to shave a few bucks off the already incredibly good value Redmi 5 Plus, without crossing the line?
Unboxing
The box we find the Xiaomi Redmi 5 in is by no means cheap looking. The red exterior is also a nice touch, definitely an eye-catcher.