Smartphone
Realme Neo 7 With Dimensity 9300+ Chipset Achieved Massive 2.4 million AnTuTu Score
The Realme Neo 7 Emerged online ahead of its official statement, it has surfaced on GeekBench revealing many things about the phone. According to the GeekBench test, the Realme Neo 7 is Said to come with the MediaTek Dimensity 9300 Plus chipset that achieves a 2.4 million score. That is efficiently a massive score by the Android phone, which speaks to the phone looking like a powerful flagship smartphone by Realme.
According to the GeekBench test, the Dimensity 9300+ is built on 3 clusters of 8 cores with a base frequency rate of 2.00 GHz. Its architecture is-
- Cluster 1: 4 Cores @ 2.00 GHz
- Cluster 2: 3 Cores @ 2.85 GHz
- Cluster 3: 1 Core @ 3.40 GHz
Realme Neo 7’s MediaTek Dimensity 9300+ Specifications
- Operating System: Android 15
- Model: realme RMX5060
- Model ID: realme RMX5060
- Motherboard: k6989v1_64
- CPU Architecture: ARM ARMv8
- Topology: 1 Processor, 8 Cores
- CPU Identifier: ARM implementer 65 architecture 8 variant 0 part 3458 revision 1
- Base Frequency: 2.00 GHz
- RAM Size: 14.98 GB
- Single-Core Score: 1528
- Multi-Core Score: 5907
- Geekbench Version: 6.2.2 for Android (AArch64)
Also, the phone will carry a massive 7000 mAh battery that could last 24 hours with heavy use. Even after the largest battery, this phone is only 8.5mm thick which introduces excellent engineering.
With a cluster clock speed of 3.40GHz, we wouldn’t be surprised to call this a no-lag phone. It can handle heavy software and play demanding games without any lag issues, something we often faced in flagship phones a few years ago.
Realme Neo 7 Release Date
The Realme Neo 7 is scheduled to release on 11th December 2024 which is almost on the door. Unfortunately, many things are yet to be revealed. It is also expected that the phone could come with 12GB RAM paired with the 512GB Storage model, however somewhat rumored it could also carry a 1TB storage model, but it is not officially revealed,m so the original specifications can be different from that.
Source: GeekBench