Friday, April 26, 2024

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro review: Is the European K20 Pro worth the purchase?

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Earlier this week the Mi 9T Pro launched in Europe as Xiaomi’s latest affordable flagship. Technically this isn’t a new phone at all, as it was previously released outside of Europe as the Redmi K20 Pro. The Redmi brand doesn’t exist in Europe, so Xiaomi elected to release the phone with the Mi 9 family branding. Of course, there are a few market-specific differences like NFC, which we’ll discuss shortly.

My talented colleague Dhruv Bhutani gave the Redmi K20 Pro a thorough review in his native India where it’s being sold (alongside China). In his review, he highly recommended the phone based on its combination of great specs and cutthroat pricing.

Since the 9T Pro is basically the K20 Pro by another name, we figured it didn’t make a lot of sense to do a full review. Instead of bringing you a conventional Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro review, we’re doing something a bit different this time. In this article, we take a closer look at how the 9T Pro stacks up in real life, how capable it is in your everyday situations, and if it’s a phone you should consider picking up for yourself.

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How is the Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro’s design and build quality?

The first thing I noticed about the Mi 9T Pro is it’s very much an eye-catcher. The pop-up camera is still a real novelty for most people, and the swirling glass designs on the back in red and blue are great. I even like the accent on the camera in the triple-rear setup. The display is a full-screen affair, with no notch and small bezels. The whole design stands out in a good way.

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro in display fingerprint sensor

The under the display fingerprint sensor isn’t perfect, still just a split second too slow, but it works well enough that I don’t mind its inclusion, and the small animation when tapping it is fun. Did I mention there’s a headphone jack with the device, too?

In terms of omissions, there’s no waterproofing to speak of and no wireless charging.

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro specs

Display 6.39-inch AMOLED
2,340 x 1,080
403 PPI
HDR
SoC Qualcomm Snapdragon 855
Octa-core
7nm
GPU Adreno 640
RAM 6GB/8GB
Storage 64GB/128GB/256GB
Cameras Rear:

Main: 48MP, f/1.75, 0.8μm, Sony IMX586
Ultra-wide: 13MP, f/2.4, 1.12μm, 124.8-degree FoV
Telephoto: 8MP, f/2.4, 1.12μm, 2x optical zoom

Front:

20MP, f/2.2, 0.8μm

Audio 3.5mm port
AAC/LDAC/aptX/aptX-HD/aptX-adaptive
Battery 4,000mAh
Non-removable
27 watt fast charging
18 watt charger included
IP rating N/A
Sensors Accelerometer
Ambient Light
Camera laser focus
E-compass
Gyroscope
In-display fingerprint
Proximity
Network LTE FDD: B1/B3/B5/B7/B8
LTE TDD: B34/B38/B39/B40/B41
LTE B41 (2535 – 2655 120MHz)
WCDMA: B1/B2/B5/B8
TD-SCDMA: B34/B39
CDMA EVDO: BC0
GSM: B2/B3/B5/B8
CDMA 1X: BC0
Connectivity USB-C
Wi-Fi 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac, 2.4/5Ghz
Bluetooth 5.0
NFC
SIM Dual Nano-SIM
Software MIUI 10
Android Pie
Dimensions and weight 156.7 x 74.3 x 8.8mm
191 grams

Xiaomi Mi 9 vs 9T Pro: What’s the difference?

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro carbon black pop up camera detail

What’s the difference between the Mi 9 and this 9T Pro? While performance specs, SoC and RAM, along with the FHD+ (2,340 x 1,080) display are the same, there’s plenty to set the two models apart.

The Mi 9T Pro ditches the 9’s notch, thanks to the pop-up selfie cam. There’s also a bigger battery at 4,000mAh, vs. the 3,300mAh in the Mi 9. Finally, the Mi 9T Pro comes with a headphone jack ⁠— much to our delight. There’s also a protective case in the box, but no earbuds.

How similar are the Mi 9T Pro and the K20 Pro?

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro red blue black back panels

There are only three notable differences between the K20 Pro and the Mi 9T Pro:

NFC. The Mi 9T Pro has NFC, the K20 Pro in India does not. NFC is essential, and it’s great that Xiaomi has it in the European model.

Carrier bands. The Mi 9T Pro has one additional band, supporting Band 20. Band 20 had been missing on other Xiaomi phones reaching Europe, and this connectivity will be helpful for anyone traveling or for those that live outside of major cities.

Color choices. There’s one less color variant for the Mi 9T Pro, missing out on the K20 Pro’s Pearl White version, leaving Europeans with three choices: Carbon Black, Flame Red, and Glacier Blue. While the black is more sensible, the red and blue options have some seriously wild glass designs on the back. In full sunlight, which isn’t all that common in northern Europe admittedly, they really shine.

How is the software on the Mi 9T Pro?

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro red home screen in hand

I’m just going to get this out of the way: I’m not really a fan of MIUI 10. The best thing I can say about the Mi 9T Pro’s software is it’s ad-free, something that many Xiaomi phones can’t claim. Unfortunately, it’s still packed full of bloatware. Pretty much every Google app has a Mi equivalent and it just feels unnecessary when Google’s apps already work so well.

The entire MIUI 10 experience is a bit buggy.

The entire MIUI 10 experience is also a bit buggy. There are no showstoppers, but there’s a range of genuinely curious hiccups throughout the device that leave me wondering what a regular user will think as they try and navigate it. Many Android users will turn off animations to make their device feel snappy, and that feels almost essential here. Turning off MIUI optimizations is a further step although not one for mainstream users, given it can introduce odds bugs and drain the battery faster.

It’s not just the bugs and bloat, it’s the design too. Icons are basic and boring. It’s almost like Xiaomi expects you to put a launcher on it. Meanwhile, the FHD+ display is actually a very good display, but the default home screen doesn’t stand out. It wasn’t until I launched games like Asphalt 9 that the AMOLED’s true qualities became clear.

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro glacier blue pop up selfie camera

Probably one of the biggest issues I ran into is the Xiaomi watermark. For some reason, Xiaomi adds watermarks on all images taken with the camera. There’s no reason to interfere with people’s photos, and I guarantee people won’t realize this exists before they snap some shots, and see “SHOT ON MI 9T PRO” branded on the bottom left. Of all the things that are unnecessary and bad about the world of Mi, this needs the most attention.

A quick Google search for “xiaomi camera watermark” displays nothing but results where people are asking how to remove the watermark. Thankfully, removing the watermark isn’t that hard: open the camera, click the menu button at the top right, click settings, then turn off the “Device watermark” slider.

Our final gripe is the privacy policy. There’s some odd language in here that might turn off some folks.

I read section 1.1.2, “Information that we collect in your use of services” with some dissatisfaction. For unspecified reasons, Xiaomi collects usage information from your device, including: “CPU, storage, battery usage, screen resolution and device temperature, camera lens model.” I couldn’t find the same from the likes of Apple, Samsung, or OnePlus, for example. That kind of thing may strike you as unreasonable.

The good news is that Xiaomi semi-acknowledges its many software problems by providing bootloader access, which should make it reasonably easy to add custom ROMs if you are in love with the phone but want to ditch its default software.

What alternatives are to the Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro?

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro red back camera detail 2

The Mi 9T Pro with 6GB RAM and 128GB storage retails on Amazon right now for €421.90, in black, with blue and red around €10 or €20 more expensive. At that price, this puts the Mi 9T Pro up against the Asus Zenfone 6, while the OnePlus 7 is comparable but around €100 more expensive.

Asus Zenfone 6 - closer back of device

The Zenfone offers much of what the Mi 9T Pro packs, but also delivers stereo speakers, a bigger battery, and better software experience. On the bright side, the 9T Pro packs an AMOLED while the ZenFone sticks to LCD. The Zenfone 6 is a definite top contender, and it’s much cleaner software certainly gives it a big advantage as well.

OnePlus 7 red back panel

When comparing the Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro to the OnePlus 7, the first thing you’ll notice is the pricing. Direct pricing on Amazon here in Germany leaves the OnePlus 7 around €150 more expensive. Now, it does come with benefits: offering a Samsung-built AMOLED display, stereo speakers, better software with solid OnePlus support, and UFS 3.0 storage. Unfortunately, the OnePlus 7 has a smaller 3,700mAh battery.

When it comes to pure performance, our benchmark Speed Test G result shows the OnePlus 7 with a time of 1:32.5, while the K20 Pro’s best time was 1:39.1. That’s quite the performance difference. In real world use, we still found the Mi 9T Pro to work well with any game or app with threw at it. And the graphite cooling system Xiaomi is pushing did seem to keep the device at a cooler temperature than other devices I’ve used over similar stretches.

In terms of cameras, the OnePlus 7 has a single-camera with OIS and a larger aperture, compared to the Mi 9T Pro’s triple camera setup. Overall the cameras performed similarly.

Should you buy the Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro?

Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro red back 2

The reason I’ve gone to the trouble of finding these discouraging small problems with the Xiaomi Mi 9T Pro is that it’s so close to being a wonderful device. It’s powerful, it’s flashy, it’s well-built, it runs all the apps you know and love nicely, and it has just about the latest everything. No waterproofing and no wireless charging don’t seem like big omissions at a device half the price of flagships.

The biggest problem with the phone is the interface, hands down. You will easily find a bug or two without trying. You can get by, but it will never delight you until you spend some time putting in your own customizations. Which, reasonably, may not be something you want to do. With most companies now it’s unnecessary to put personal tweaks into a phone because they’ve put effort into nice, tasteful design. But with this phone, customization and third-party launchers are absolutely a necessity if you’re going to be using this device as your everyday companion.

The Mi 9T Pro, at €430, or less, isn’t quite the absolute no-brainer that I was hoping for. If you don’t mind working around Xiaomi’s software deficiencies, there is a lot to love here. If you’d rather have a phone that just works out of the box, you may want to look at alternatives.

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