Nubia Red Magic 7 - Technoz Daily

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Two-minute review

Red is a Chinese brand that's been making gaming phones for ages. It's part of Nubia, which was once part of ZTE – and may still be; the internet is undecided on that fact. 

Why the history lesson? Because the Red Magic 7 feels like it's going through something of an identity crisis. Funny menu translations, some rough edges within the UI, and an underwhelming battery collide with what is otherwise an affordable gaming phone with tons of power and some neat gamer-tailored flourishes.

Now, if you're in the market for a gaming phone, you should expect an angry-looking design, and the Red Magic's styling transcends angry, bordering on hangry. The glass back is blazoned with glyphs that showcase its specs, and on its most premium RAM and storage version, there's a transparent section under which sits an RGB-lit fan. It's a lot. 

The Red Magic 7 is also big and bold with a cold, stark metal frame, prominent vents and flat sides. It's heavy, thick, and a handful, whether you're holding it like a phone or a controller.

With loudspeakers that boom matched with that bold 6.8-inch 165Hz screen, the Red Magic 7 plays back movies and games with impact, and thanks to stacks of power under the hood – that Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, performance is on-point too.

The interface is the main area the Red Magic 7 drops the ball. It runs Android, so app support is great, and Red's also added a bunch of widgets to the mix to help you quickly control its fan and access gaming features. That said, English translations in that miss the mark are dotted throughout the UI, and there are also a few visual misses.

Matched with day-long battery with medium to light use, and working day-long battery with heavier use, gamers who don't fancy an afternoon charge to get through a full day should look at alternatives with bigger batteries like the ROG Phone 5.

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

At its price, there's very little that can compete with the Red Magic 7 when it comes to power and gaming-focused appeal. 

The Poco F4 GT is an excellent alternative, and its physical shoulder buttons are better than the Red Magic 7's touch buttons in our opinion. Its smaller screen also makes it a bit more manageable (and its battery is better), though it isn't as immersive for watching content on, and its styling isn't as gamer-oriented as that of the Red Magic 7.

Alternatively, if you don't mind having 2021-grade internals, the Asus ROG Phone 5 and 5s Pro pack massive batteries and support for excellent accessories with Snapdragon 888-series power.

Nubia Red Magic 7 price and availability

  • Costs from $629 / £529 / AU$900
  • Various RAM and storage configurations
  • Affordable for a Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 phone

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

The Red Magic 7 price is well below most Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 smartphones. You can pick it up for $629 / £529 (roughly AU$900) with 12GB RAM and 128GB in an Obsidian color – this is the entry-level configuration. The 16GB RAM / 256GB storage model costs $729 / £619 (roughly AU$1,090) and is available in Pulsar – a pink/purple reflective color scheme. The Supernova color option, which features the RGB fan window and 18GB RAM costs $799 / £679 (roughly AU$1,200).

The phone went on sale in early February 2022 and is available SIM-free exclusively, with no major carriers or networks ranging it with a plan or contract.

  • Value score: 4/5

Nubia Red Magic 7 design

  • Available in Obsidian, Pulsar, and Supernova color options
  • Large-sized Android phone
  • Garish gaming phone design

When we consider the evolution of gaming phones since the ROG Phone and original Black Shark launched, Nubia's Red Magic 7 doesn't push the envelope too far when it comes to physical gaming tools. It's got touch-sensitive triggers – but that's about it. 

The front of the phone is a big flat screen that's notch-free, the sides are flat, stark metal with grilles, and the back is curved glass. Each configuration is available in a different color, and we tested out the Supernova option. What sets this apart from the rest of the Red Magic 7s is the window that sits alongside the camera, so you can peek into the fan, which is lit up by LED lights when gaming. 

The phone measures 170.6 x 78.3 x 9.5mm and weighs 215g, making it one of the biggest and beefiest options around, but it's still significantly lighter than an iPhone 13 Pro Max (238g). 

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

A red metal slider on the right sight catapaults you into a gaming interface that centralises your games.  (Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

The power button sits along the right side, and volume rocker on the left, while the USB-C port is at the base. There’s no second USB-C port along the Red Magic 7's side, which would have made gaming more comfortable, but there is a 3.5mm headphone jack so you can plug in your headphones.

Around the back is a curved glass panel that's a glorified spec sheet. Loaded up with glyphs and specs, everything from the phone's chipset to the screen's refresh rate and fan rotation speed is proudly blazoned across the glass. 

The Red Magic 7's detailing does make it look like a spaceship – not a bad thing if you're a gaming phone Though unlike the ROG Phone 5, which was giving us more glyphs and alien race vibes, the Red Magic 7 is very on the nose with all those specs. 

Given the exposed vents and visible fan that pumps air through the phone, you shouldn't be surprised at the fact the Nubia Red Magic 7 isn't water or dust resistant. That being said, it is protected on the front, thanks to a pre-fitted screen protector, and there's also a case in the box. 

On the right side, there are touch-sensitive triggers which sport a 500Hz touch sampling rate, making them responsive, and with a flick of the left-hand slider, you can fire up the Red Magic gaming space.

  • Design score: 3.5/5

Nubia Red Magic 7 display

  • Large-size 6.8-inch screen
  • FHD+ resolution, 165Hz refresh rate
  • 720Hz touch sampling rate

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

The Nubia Red Magic 7's screen is big, bold, and bonkers smooth. Loaded up with a sky-high 165Hz refresh rate, it's smoother than any mainstream flagship, and with a nippy 720Hz touch sampling rate, it's also responsive for gaming too. 

At the heart of the Magic 7's screen is a 6.8-inch panel with a FHD+ resolution and AMOLED technology. With a 700 nits max brightness, it doesn't beam as brightly as some competitors, but in side by side comparison, didn't fare too much worse than many of today's finest flagships. 

The whole Red Magic 7 line ditches punch-hole selfie cameras and notches, so that means you get a full-screen, uninterrupted experience, something of a novelty today. The result is a wide, expansive, ample display with punchy saturation and very zingy colors by default. In the settings, you can pare back the vividness for a more natural look. 

Of course, you don't need a 165Hz screen all the time, so you can toggle between 60Hz, 90Hz, 120Hz, and 165Hz easily through the quick menu in the notifications shade, or a widget that you can deploy on your home screen. That said, there's no auto-refresh rate, which doesn't bode well for batter life.

  • Display score: 4/5

Nubia Red Magic 7 camera

  • 64MP main, 8MP ultrawide, 2MP macro
  • Lots of classic Samsung camera modes
  • 8MP selfie camera

Just like many other gaming phones, including the Lenovo Legion Phone Dual, Nubia isn't prioritizing the camera specs when compared to other smartphones launching at the moment. 

At the helm is a high-resolution, but small-sized sensor, which clocks in at 64MP and roughly half an inch. On the plus, its lens packs a wide aperture of f/1.8, and there's an 8MP ultra-wide camera too, with a 13mm focal length and a 1/4-inch sensor. Finally for the main camera mix is a 2MP fixed-focus macro camera with an f/2.4 aperture. 

Front cameras are arguably more important for gaming phones, but the 8MP sensor in the selfie camera looks like it's the same spec as the ultra-wide camera, and doesn't promise too much based on numbers alone. 

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

Despite the Red Magic 7's middling camera specs, you can still get a very decent picture from the phone, especially in bright, evenly-lit scenes. With Qualcomm's latest image processing as part of the Snapdragon 8 Gen 1, Nubia has eked out decent dynamic range and punchy colors from daylight shots taken on the Red Magic 7.

Photo contrast can be a bit high, so detail in the shadows might need to be pulled out in an edit, but all in all, the main camera's daylight photos exceeded our expectations. As for the ultra-wide camera, this does an okay job of adding extra versatility to the mix, however, quality falls behind the main camera's photos, and the macro camera is the worst of the bunch.

When the lights drop, the detail does too. While photos aren't too grainy which is good, the Red Magic 7 won't magic a dark scene into a bright picture like competing camera phones. The night mode helps with this, and boosts dynamic range in low-light scenes.

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

One area the Nubia Red Magic 7's camera tries very hard to impress is with its photo modes. There are plenty of them, and they attempt to add tonnes of value. In addition to standard modes, there's Star trail, Starry sky, Electronic aperture, Light draw (light trails), Multi-exposure, Slow motion, Time-lapse, Clone, Trajectory, Macro, 3D, ID photo, Panorama, Zoom blue, Freeze frame, Phantom, VLOG, Hitchcock and Art camera. 

These modes are rough around the edges, but many are fun, so if you fancy getting creative, there's plenty here to play with. The video recording quality is also better than we thought it would be. Climbing up to 8K in resolution and 60fps when shooting at 4K or lower, the footage is steadied well and sharpness is on point. Low light performance isn't good, but if you're okay with saving your video capture for daylight scenes, you'll probably be impressed with the Magic 7. 

  • Camera score: 3/5

Camera samples

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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Red Magic 7 sample photos

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

Nubia Red Magic 7 performance

  • Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 power
  • 12-18GB RAM
  • 128-256GB storage

The Nubia Red Magic 7's sheer power is the area it shines the brightest. With its Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 chip, it's able to handle all modern-day games, and the model we tested with its fan pumping air through the phone stayed relatively cool even under pressure. 

When we put the phone through the Geekbench 5 benchmark test, it returned a multi-core score of 3,600, which puts it above phones like the Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra, and gaming phones like the ROG Phone 5, and even bested some other Snapdragon 8 Gen 1 devices like the Vivo X80 Pro. 3D Mark scores were also strong, with a Wildlife benchmark score of 9,960, slightly exceeding the Poco F4 GT, which scored 9,930 in our tests. 

The Red Magic 7's speed isn't just a result of its power, it's also down to the sky-high refresh rates that help the phone feel very fast. The only issue we had with the fan was that it fired up when running benchmarks, even when we manually turned it off. Otherwise, it behaved just fine. It didn't keep the phone ice-cold – 30 minutes of Genshin Impact warmed things up a lot, making the slab of a phone hot and uncomfortable to hold. That said, what we did notice was the fan cools things down more quickly than a fanless phone like the Xiaomi 12 Pro. 

  • Performance score: 4.5/5

Nubia Red Magic 7 software

  • Android 12 software
  • Red Magic UI feels relatively stock
  • Lots of UI inconsistencies and rough edges
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Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)
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Screenshot of the Red Magic 7's translation which misses the mark

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

In the image above, you can see the keyboard, and below it, the background – in this case, the apps tray. We're pretty sure Nubia didn't intend for the keyboard to float like this, and if it did, it's an interesting choice. The next image is a quite funny low battery warning. Now, we're all for sassy interfaces filled with personality, but once again it feels like a poor translation rather than an intentional move. 

Despite these UI quirks (there are more), the Nubia Red Magic 7 runs Android 12, so app support is great. Nubia blocks some of the visual flourishes of Android's OS – Material You, for example, is missing. This lets you change the color scheme of the phone menus to match the wallpaper. 

Nubia also loads up a bunch of widgets to quickly access gaming-focused features of the Red Magic 7, so you can toggle fan speed, see your game time for the day, get a gaming reminder and adjust your screen refresh rate on the fly. 

Through its gaming software accessible when you're playing a game, you can access fan control, limit background notifications, record the screen, add '4D' vibration, so when the volume gets loud, the phone rumbles. This is also where you can set the touch-sensitive triggers and a controller. Frustratingly, button mapping for games only supports Red's own controller accessory. You can't hook up a PS4 controller to a game like Genshin impact therefore unless natively supported. 

So while the gaming elements within the Red Magic 7's interface are good, we just can't look past the lack of refinement in the rest of the UI.

  • Software score: 3/5

Nubia Red Magic 7 battery life

  • 4,500mAh battery is small for a gaming phone
  • Seldom makes it through a full day when gaming
  • Fast 65W charging

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

The Red Magic 7 has a 4,500mAh battery, which is on the small side for a gaming phone. There's also power-hungry 5G connectivity on board, as well as the top-tier power.

Achieving less than eight and a half hours of screen-on time, the Red Magic 7's battery life is bested by the gaming phone competition, with the ROG Phone 5 Pro pulling in over 15 hours with its 6,000mAh cell when set at the same brightness level.

What the Red Magic 7 does do is charge quickly, with the 65W supplied charger powering it up by 45 percent in just 10 minutes, and fully charging it in around half an hour.

  • Battery score: 2/5

Scorecard

Attributes Notes Rating
Design Bold and angry, the Red Magic 7 is a gaming phone through and through. Good, traditional, but fails to push the envelope. 3.5/5
Display Bold and brilliant with a 165Hz refres rate – a high point of the phone 4/5
Performance Nippy when gaming and working through the UI, it delivers best-in-class power, but does get hot. 4.5/5
Camera While you don't buy gaming phones for their cameras, the Red Magic 7's falls does a good, but not great job at picture taking 3/5
Battery The Red Magic 7's humble 4500mAh battery falls behind the competition 2/5
Software While the core UI is relatively simple and stock, poor translations and some rough edges limit the Magic 7's appeal 3/5
Value Despite not being a perfect smartphone, the Red Magic 7 offers exceptional values for anyone who wants a gaming phone above all else (and can handle mediocre battery life) 4/5

Should I buy the Nubia Magic 7?

Image of the Nubia Red Magic 7 smartphone

(Image credit: Basil Kronfli)

Buy it if...

Don’t buy it if…

Also consider

  • First reviewed May 2022

How we test

We pride ourselves on our independence and our rigorous review-testing process, offering up long-term attention to the products we review and making sure our reviews are updated and maintained - regardless of when a device was released, if you can still buy it, it's on our radar.

Read more about how we test



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