iQOO 15 Apex Edition Full Review 2026 — I Honestly Didn't Expect This Much
1. First Impressions — Okay, iQOO Actually Did Something Special Here
I'll be honest with you. When iQOO announced the Apex Edition, my first reaction was — "Oh great, another colour variant. How exciting." I was ready to write a three-paragraph news post and move on.
The moment you pick up the iQOO 15 Apex Edition, something clicks. The back panel is doing things I genuinely haven't seen on a smartphone before. It shifts. It flows. It looks completely different depending on which way you tilt it. Under office lighting it looks like an elegant piece of art. Step outside into the sun and it practically glows. My colleague grabbed it off my desk thinking it was some kind of decorative object. That pretty much tells you everything.
But here's the thing — underneath that absolutely wild design is the same iQOO 15 that launched in India back in November 2025, and that phone was already a beast. We're talking Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, a 6.85-inch Samsung panel that hits 6000 nits of brightness, triple 50MP Sony cameras, a 7000mAh battery that laughs at your 18-hour days, and 100W charging that fills it back up before you've finished your morning chai.
So the Apex Edition is essentially iQOO saying — take everything we already built, and now make it look like it belongs in a museum.
For gamers, power users, content creators, or honestly just anyone who is tired of every flagship phone looking identical — this is worth your full attention.
2. Full Specs — Everything in One Place
Brand / Model: iQOO 15 Apex Edition
Launch Date (India): April 1, 2026 (Sale: April 5, 2026)
Price: ₹72,999 (12GB + 256GB) | ₹79,999 (16GB + 512GB)
Effective Price After Bank Offers: ₹66,999 | ₹73,999
Operating System: Android 16 with OriginOS 6.0
Processor: Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 (3nm Octa-Core)
GPU: Adreno 840 + Q3 Gaming Chip
RAM: 12GB or 16GB LPDDR5X Ultra
Storage: 256GB or 512GB UFS 4.1
Cooling: 8,000mm² Vapor Chamber System
Display: 6.85-inch Samsung M14 8T LTPO AMOLED, 2K+ (3168×1440px)
Refresh Rate: 1Hz to 144Hz Variable LTPO
Peak Brightness: 6,000 nits | 2,600 nits in High Brightness Mode
Display Extras:HDR10+, Dolby Vision, 2160Hz PWM Dimming, DC Dimming, 118% DCI-P3
Colours Supported: 1.07 Billion
Rear Camera 1: 50MP Sony IMX921 with OIS, f/1.88
Rear Camera 2: 50MP Sony IMX882 Periscope Telephoto, 3x Optical Zoom
Rear Camera 3: 50MP Ultra-Wide
Front Camera: 32MP
Battery: 7,000mAh Silicon-Carbon
Wired Charging: 100W FlashCharge
Wireless Charging: 40W
Fingerprint: Ultrasonic In-Display
Face Unlock: Yes
IP Rating: IP68 + IP69
Wi-Fi: Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be)
Bluetooth: 6.0
NFC: Yes
GPS: GPS L1+L5, Beidou, GLONASS, Galileo, QZSS
Colours Available: Apex (Holographic Ink Wash), Alpha (Black), Legend (White)
Software Promise: 5 Years OS Updates + 7 Years Security Patches
Where to Buy: Amazon India, iQOO.com, Vivo Offline Stores
3. Design & Build — This Back Panel Is Going to Make You Stop People on the Street
Let me spend a little extra time here because the design is genuinely the story of this phone.
iQOO calls it a "holographic imaging-based dynamic ink wash painting design." That sounds like marketing speak, and honestly I rolled my eyes when I first read it. But it's actually the most accurate description they could give.
The rear panel is inspired by traditional Eastern ink wash painting — shui mo hua — where ink is allowed to flow and diffuse through water to create organic, unpredictable patterns. What iQOO has done is replicate that aesthetic using holographic imaging technology layered into the back glass. The result is a flowing, shifting pattern of deep red, grey-black, and white that genuinely looks different from every angle. You will never look at it the same way twice. That is not an exaggeration.
This is actually the "Lingyun" colourway that iQOO released in China earlier — Lingyun meaning "soaring to the clouds." It was a China exclusive for a while and a lot of Indian iQOO fans were asking for it. iQOO listened, rebranded it as the Apex Edition, and here we are.
And the camera module — it has an RGB LED strip running around it. I know some people find RGB on phones a bit much, but it's tastefully done here. It can act as a notification light, a gaming indicator, or just a visual accent when you put the phone down on a table. In a dark room it looks genuinely striking.
On durability — IP68 and IP69. Both. Not one, both. IP68 means you can drop this in water up to 1.5 metres deep for 30 minutes and it'll be fine. IP69 is an industrial rating that means it can handle high-pressure, high-temperature water jets — the kind of test factories do on equipment. Having both ratings on a consumer smartphone at this price is remarkable and gives you real-world confidence to use this phone in rain, at the beach, or just without the constant anxiety of liquid damage.
Bottom line on design: If you've been looking at flagships and thinking they all look the same — this is your answer. The iQOO 15 Apex Edition doesn't look like anything else on the market right now.
4. Display — 6000 Nits Sounds Like Marketing Until You Actually Step Outside
There's a phrase that gets thrown around a lot in smartphone reviews — "best-in-class display." I try not to use it unless I mean it. In this case, I mean it.
The 6.85-inch Samsung M14 8T LTPO AMOLED panel on this phone is exceptional. I'm going to explain why in plain terms because the spec sheet alone doesn't tell the full story.
On the brightness number — 6000 nits
Most phones you might already own probably hit somewhere between 1000 and 2000 nits. A genuinely bright flagship screen hits 2000 to 3000 nits. The iQOO 15 Apex Edition hits 6000 nits at peak. That's not a small gap. That's double or triple what most phones offer.
What does it mean in real life? It means you can be standing in direct sunlight on a summer afternoon in Delhi or Chennai — phone screen reflecting the sky — and you can still read every word on your screen without squinting or shading it with your hand. For anyone who has ever struggled to read a notification outside, this is genuinely life-changing for a phone display.
On the 144Hz LTPO refresh rate
The LTPO part matters as much as the 144Hz part. A standard 144Hz display runs at 144Hz constantly, draining your battery whether you need the high refresh or not. LTPO means the panel can drop down to 1Hz — basically pausing — when you're reading a static page or looking at a still image. Then it snaps back up to 144Hz the moment you start scrolling or gaming. You get the best of both worlds without the battery penalty.
On the colours and HDR
118% of DCI-P3 means this screen can show colours that are more vivid than even the cinema standard. Dolby Vision and HDR10+ support means Netflix and Prime Video content in those formats will look dramatically better on this screen than on most competing phones. The blacks are the deep, absolute blacks that only OLED can deliver. The highlights can go extremely bright. The combination creates an image depth that you genuinely have to see to appreciate.
On eye comfort
2160Hz PWM dimming is iQOO's answer to people who get eye strain or headaches from OLED screens. The faster the PWM frequency, the less perceptible the flicker — and at 2160Hz it's clinically imperceptible. If you've avoided OLED phones in the past because of eye sensitivity, this panel is one of the safest available. DC Dimming is also there for users who want it.
Display verdict: It is among the very best smartphone displays you can buy in India in 2026 at any price.
5. Performance — The Phone That Does Not Know the Word "Lag"
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 is Qualcomm's best work yet, and if you've been following mobile chips you'll know that's saying something. Built on TSMC's 3nm process, it's faster than last year's chip while being more power-efficient. That combination — faster and more efficient at the same time — is exactly what you want in a flagship.
In day to day use
Everything is instant. Apps open before your finger lifts. Multitasking with a dozen tabs and background apps running doesn't cause any hesitation. The phone responds to every touch, every swipe, every gesture with a precision and immediacy that after a while just starts to feel normal — until you pick up someone else's phone and suddenly wonder why it feels like it's thinking before responding.
The storage matters too
UFS 4.1 storage means apps install faster, large files move faster, and the whole system feels snappier because data is being read and written at significantly higher speeds than older phones. Combined with LPDDR5X Ultra RAM — 12GB or 16GB depending on your variant — this is a device that doesn't run out of working memory even when you're being reckless with background apps.
The Q3 Gaming Chip
This is a dedicated hardware chip that sits alongside the Snapdragon SoC and handles gaming-specific processing tasks separately. Think of it as a specialist brought in specifically for gaming rather than making the main processor do everything. The result is that gaming workloads get dedicated compute resources, which means better frame rates, less input lag, and less heat generated because tasks are distributed more intelligently.
The cooling system — 8000mm²
A vapor chamber this large in a phone chassis is a serious engineering commitment. The short version: heat generated during intense gaming or heavy processing is spread across a much larger surface area and dissipated faster, which means the chipset doesn't need to throttle its performance to protect itself from overheating. An hour of gaming and the phone is warm but never uncomfortably hot. Sustained performance after 60 minutes of heavy use is remarkably close to the first minute performance. That's rare.
Benchmark numbers if you care about them
AnTuTu v10 puts it around 2.5 to 2.7 million points, which is top-tier globally for 2026. Geekbench 6 single-core is over 3000. Multi-core is over 9000. These aren't just good numbers — they mean the phone is future-proofed for demanding apps and games that don't even exist yet.
6. Gaming — This Is What iQOO Was Built For
Everything about iQOO as a brand exists to serve one user: the person who takes mobile gaming seriously. The iQOO 15 Apex Edition is the pinnacle of that mission right now.
BGMI
At Smooth + Extreme settings, this phone plays BGMI at a locked 90 FPS. Not "usually 90 FPS with occasional drops." Locked. Consistent. Even in situations where multiple squads are engaging simultaneously and particle effects are going wild, the frame delivery stays smooth. Touch response in gaming mode is sampled at 240Hz, which means your tap registers so fast it almost feels like the game is predicting your input. Competitive players will notice this immediately.
Call of Duty Mobile
Very High graphics, Maximum Frame Rate. Smooth throughout. The 144Hz display makes a real difference in fast shooter gameplay — movement feels more fluid, tracking targets feels more natural, and the overall experience is noticeably better than on a standard 60Hz or even 90Hz display.
Genshin Impact and Wuthering Waves
Maximum graphics settings, 60 FPS cap. Rock solid. After 45 minutes of continuous play the phone is warm but fully comfortable to hold. The vapor chamber cooling is doing exactly what it's supposed to do, and the performance doesn't drop off over time the way it does on phones with less capable thermal systems.
The features that actually matter for gaming
Monster Mode pushes everything to maximum when you need it. Multi-Turbo 7.0 manages CPU, GPU, network, and memory in real time based on what the game is demanding at that exact moment. Network Boost prioritises your game's data packets so background apps aren't competing for bandwidth during a match. These aren't features that exist just on a spec sheet — you can feel them working.
Gaming verdict: There is no better gaming phone available in India under ₹80,000 right now. If mobile gaming is the primary reason you're buying a phone, stop reading and just get this one.
7. Camera — Better Than I Expected, Honest About Its Limits
Let me be straight with you about the camera, because I think iQOO users deserve an honest take rather than blanket praise.
The iQOO 15 Apex Edition has a very capable camera system. It is not the best camera phone in the world. It does not try to be. But for the price and the type of user this phone is built for, it delivers genuinely impressive results across all three rear lenses.
- The Main Camera — Sony IMX921
This is a proper flagship sensor with a wide f/1.88 aperture and optical image stabilisation. In daylight the photos are sharp, colours are accurate, dynamic range is excellent. You can shoot in bright sunlight with harsh shadows and the phone handles both ends of the exposure range well — highlights don't blow out, shadows retain detail. Skin tones specifically are handled with more accuracy than I expected, which is something a lot of phones still get wrong.
The processing is punchy without being overdone. Colours look vibrant and appealing for social media without looking artificially saturated. There's a natural quality to the daylight shots that I genuinely appreciate.
- The periscope telephoto — Sony IMX882, 3x optical
3x optical zoom is the sweet spot for portrait photography. At this focal length, faces get natural compression, backgrounds blur beautifully, and subjects are separated from their environment in a way that just looks flattering. The 50MP resolution on the telephoto means even at 3x you have plenty of detail to work with. Up to 30x digital zoom is available and it's fine for quick reference shots, but I'd stick to 3x to 6x for anything you actually care about.
- The Ultra-wide — 50MP
Consistent colour science with the main camera. That matters more than most people realise — lots of phones have ultra-wide lenses that look noticeably different in tone from the main camera, making wide shots feel disconnected from the rest of your photo library. iQOO has done good work keeping the look coherent across lenses.
- Night photography
Here's where I'll be honest. It's good. It's not great. The IMX921's large sensor helps, and the Night Mode multi-frame processing does genuine work to reduce noise and lift shadows. But if you're someone who regularly shoots in dark bars, dimly lit restaurants, or city streets at night, and that's a priority for you — the Pixel 9 Pro or Galaxy S25 Ultra will still serve you better. The iQOO 15 is a solid B+ in low light. Not an A.
- Selfie camera — 32MP
Sharp, good skin tone reproduction, capable portrait mode. Everything you need for daily selfies, social media, and video calls. Nothing to complain about here.
- Video
4K at 60fps with OIS and EIS working together. Footage is smooth, detailed, and looks genuinely good for social media content without any post-processing needed. HDR video recording is there for shooting in mixed lighting. If you're a casual video creator, this camera will absolutely serve you well.
Camera verdict
A well-rounded triple 50MP system that outperforms expectations for a gaming-focused flagship. Just don't go in expecting it to match dedicated camera phones — and don't let that stop you from buying it if gaming and performance are your primary needs.
8. Battery — I Stopped Carrying a Charger to Work
I don't say that lightly. I'm someone who has always carried a charger or a power bank because I've been burned too many times by flagship phones that tap out by early evening.
The 7000mAh silicon-carbon battery in the iQOO 15 Apex Edition genuinely changed that habit for me.
Why silicon-carbon is actually different
Normal batteries use graphite anodes. Silicon-carbon anodes store significantly more energy in the same physical space. The practical result: a bigger battery that doesn't make the phone thicker or heavier. And because the chemistry handles fast charging better, you can fill it at 100W repeatedly without the aggressive capacity degradation you'd normally expect. Two years from now, this battery should still be performing well.
Real numbers from real use
On a typical day — that's social media scrolling, a couple of hours of music, some calls, browsing, and maybe 45 minutes of gaming — I consistently finished the day above 40% battery. Some days I was finishing at 50%. This is a phone that makes you almost forget about battery management entirely.
Heavy gaming for 5 to 6 hours straight will get you to empty. Video streaming for 10 to 12 hours straight will get you to empty. Anything short of that and you're making it through the day and then some.
The 100W charging
Half an hour gets you from dead to around 80%. Under an hour gets you to 100%. I genuinely changed my charging habits with this phone — instead of plugging in overnight every night, I'd charge for 30 minutes in the morning while getting ready and that was enough. It changes the relationship you have with the charger in a way that's hard to describe until you experience it.
40W wireless
Most wireless charging on Android phones is a compromise — slow enough that you only use it out of convenience rather than necessity. 40W wireless is fast enough to be your primary charging method if you want. It's meaningfully faster than what competitors offer wirelessly.
Battery verdict: The best battery experience I've had on an Android flagship in India. Between the massive silicon-carbon cell and the 100W charging, this phone takes battery anxiety completely off the table.
9. Software — OriginOS 6 Has Grown Up Considerably
I know OriginOS isn't everyone's first choice. Fans of stock Android often look at heavily customised skins with suspicion, and fair enough — some of them earn that suspicion with bloatware, aggressive notifications, and interfaces that feel designed to confuse rather than help.
OriginOS 6 on Android 16 is not that.
The day to day experience
- It's smooth. Animations are fluid and well-paced. The interface is clean without being sterile, with dynamic theming that picks up colours from your wallpaper and applies them tastefully throughout the system. Notifications are well-managed. The quick settings panel is sensibly laid out. The home screen customisation is genuinely flexible without being overwhelming.
- There's some bloatware — a few pre-installed apps you didn't ask for — but nothing that gets in the way. Most of it can be uninstalled or at minimum ignored.
The AI features that are actually useful
- AI Photo Enhancement works on-device and quietly improves your shots without you needing to think about it. AI Battery Optimisation learns over time which apps you use and when, pre-loading them so they open faster while sleeping apps you haven't touched in days. AI Gaming Boost dynamically adjusts resources mid-game based on what's happening on screen. AI Call Translation is genuinely impressive for multilingual households — real-time translation of phone calls across Hindi, English, and other supported languages.
- These aren't features added to a spec list for marketing purposes. They're baked into the OS in ways that make daily life tangibly better.
- The software support commitment that changes everything
- Five years of Android OS updates. Seven years of security patches. This is the part of the iQOO 15 Apex Edition story that doesn't get talked about enough.
Think about how long you actually keep a phone. Most people in India keep their flagship for 3 to 4 years. The iQOO 15 Apex Edition will be running a supported, updated version of Android for all of that time and beyond. Security patches running until 2033 means the phone you're buying today will still be protected from vulnerabilities nearly a decade from now. For ₹73,000 that is extraordinary long-term value.
10. Connectivity — They Didn't Miss Anything
Wi-Fi 7 means you're ready for the next generation of home routers — lower latency, much higher throughput, less congestion in dense Wi-Fi environments. If you're gaming over Wi-Fi, the difference between Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7 in terms of ping stability is real and measurable.
Bluetooth 6.0 delivers more stable audio connections, lower power drain, and better performance with modern true wireless earbuds.
The 5G band coverage is one of the most comprehensive I've seen on a phone at this price — 19 bands covering everything Jio, Airtel, and Vi currently broadcast. You won't find yourself in a 5G zone and unable to connect.
NFC for tap-to-pay is there, works flawlessly with Google Pay and PhonePe. The ultrasonic fingerprint sensor is noticeably more reliable than optical equivalents — it works when your finger is slightly wet, slightly dirty, or not perfectly centred, which optical sensors frequently fail at.
One thing to note: no 3.5mm jack. If you still use wired headphones you'll need a USB-C adapter. That's a trade-off, and a fair one given everything else packed into this chassis
11. How Does It Compare to the Competition?
Against OnePlus 13s (₹69,999 starting)
Very close competition. Both run the same chipset. The iQOO 15 wins on battery size (7000 vs 6000mAh), display brightness (6000 vs 4500 nits), IP rating (IP68+IP69 vs IP69), and 5G band coverage. OnePlus counters with a slightly higher 50W wireless charging and a software experience some users prefer. For gaming and endurance, iQOO 15 Apex is the better choice.
Against Samsung Galaxy S25 (₹84,999 starting)
The Galaxy S25 costs more and is outclassed on battery (4000mAh vs 7000mAh), charging (25W vs 100W), and display size. Samsung wins on camera refinement and the near-stock One UI experience. If camera is your absolute top priority and you have the budget — consider the Galaxy. For everything else, the iQOO 15 Apex Edition is the smarter purchase.
Against Realme GT 7 Pro (₹59,999 starting)
The GT 7 Pro undercuts the Apex Edition by ₹13,000 and offers faster 120W charging. But it gives up wireless charging entirely, the dual IP rating, the unique design, and the 5+7 year software support promise. The iQOO 15 Apex Edition justifies its premium over the long term.
12. Price & Where to Buy
12GB + 256GB — ₹72,999 (Effective ₹66,999 with bank offers)
16GB + 512GB — ₹79,999 (Effective ₹73,999 with bank offers)
Pre-Booking Offers:
₹6,000 instant discount with select bank cards. 12 months zero-cost EMI. Free iQOO TWS 1e earbuds worth ₹1,899 for everyone who pre-books.
Where: Amazon India, iQOO.com, and offline Vivo stores. Sale date is April 5, 2026.
Which variant should you buy? Get the 16GB + 512GB. For ₹7,000 more you're getting double the storage and 4 extra GB of RAM. On a phone you're planning to keep for 3 to 4 years with a 5+7 software promise, that headroom matters.
13. Pros & Cons — The Honest List
What I Love:
The design — nothing else looks like this right now. The battery life — genuinely changed my daily routine. The display — 6000 nits in the summer sun is something you can't unsee. The gaming performance — the Q3 chip + vapor chamber combo is the real deal. The 100W + 40W charging — both fast, both practical. IP68 + IP69 — carry this phone everywhere without worry. Sony sensors on all three cameras — consistent, capable, trustworthy. Five plus seven years of software support — makes every rupee work harder over time.
What I'd Change:
I wish the telephoto was 5x instead of 3x — 3x is good but 5x opens up more creative options. No headphone jack — still a loss even in 2026 for some users. OriginOS won't win over die-hard stock Android fans. 6.85 inches is a big phone — if you have small hands, be honest with yourself before buying.
14. Should You Buy It?
Here's how I'd think about it simply.
If you game on your phone, even casually — yes. Buy it.
If battery life has been a frustration with your current phone — yes. Buy it.
If you're tired of every premium phone looking identical and want something that genuinely stands out — yes. Buy it.
If you want a phone that will still be getting software and security updates in 2030, 2031, 2032 — yes. Buy it.
If you are a dedicated professional photographer who shoots entirely on your phone and needs the absolute best zoom versatility — the Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra or Pixel 9 Pro XL deserve your attention first.
If you want a smaller phone — this isn't it. Simple as that.
For the overwhelming majority of people reading this who want a powerful, durable, beautiful, long-lasting flagship under ₹80,000 in India in 2026 — the iQOO 15 Apex Edition is the most complete answer the market has right now.
15. Final Verdict — My Honest Take After Using It
Score: 9.1 out of 10 — Highly Recommended
I started this review mildly sceptical about whether a colour variant deserved a full deep-dive. I'm finishing it genuinely impressed.
The iQOO 15 Apex Edition is the whole package in a way that's rare at this price. It's fast in a way you can feel every day. The battery lasts long enough that you stop thinking about it. The display is so good that switching back to another phone feels like a downgrade. The design is completely unlike anything else on sale in India right now. And the long-term software support promise gives you real confidence that this investment will pay off across years rather than months.
Is it perfect? No. The camera has a ceiling that camera-focused flagships push past. It's a big phone that demands two hands. OriginOS isn't for everyone.
But perfection was never the point. The point was to build the most complete, most powerful, most interesting flagship available to Indian buyers under ₹80,000 in 2026.
16. FAQ — Real Questions, Real Answers
- What is the iQOO 15 Apex Edition price in India?
₹72,999 for 12GB + 256GB and ₹79,999 for 16GB + 512GB. After ₹6,000 bank offer, you're looking at ₹66,999 and ₹73,999 respectively. Sales started April 5, 2026 on Amazon India, iQOO.com, and offline.
2.What's actually different about the Apex Edition vs the regular iQOO 15?
The hardware is identical. The only difference is the rear panel — a holographic ink wash design in red, grey, and black that shifts dynamically with light. It's the Chinese "Lingyun" colourway, rebranded and brought to India for the first time.
3.Is this the best gaming phone under ₹80,000 in India right now?
In my honest opinion — yes. The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 + Q3 chip + 144Hz display + vapor chamber cooling is a combination that nothing at this price matches for sustained gaming performance.
4.How long does the battery realistically last?
Mixed daily use gets you 8 to 11 hours of screen-on time easily. If you're gaming hard, expect 5 to 6 hours. If you're streaming video, 10 to 12 hours. It's the best battery life I've personally experienced on an Android flagship this year.
5.Will it survive rain and being near water?
With IP68 + IP69, yes — more confidently than almost any other phone at this price. IP68 handles full submersion. IP69 handles high-pressure water jets. Use it in rain, at the beach, around the pool. You'll be fine.
6.Is the camera actually good or just good for a gaming phone?
Both. It's genuinely good by any measure — sharp daylight shots, capable night mode, consistent colours across all three lenses. It's not competing with the Pixel 9 Pro for the camera crown. But it's absolutely a camera you'll be happy with in everyday use.
7.What Android version does it run and how long will it be supported?
Android 16 with OriginOS 6.0 out of the box. iQOO has committed to 5 years of Android version updates and 7 years of security patches. That takes you to 2031 for OS updates and 2033 for security — remarkable for the Indian market.
8.Does it support all Indian 5G networks?
Yes. 19 5G bands covering Jio, Airtel, and Vi in both SA and NSA modes. It's one of the most comprehensive 5G band lineups on any phone in India right now.
9.Is wireless charging fast enough to actually be useful?
At 40W, yes. This isn't the slow 10W or 15W wireless charging that you'd only use overnight. 40W is fast enough to be a genuine daily charging method if you have a compatible pad.
10.Which variant should I buy — 12GB or 16GB?
16GB + 512GB if your budget allows it. For ₹7,000 more over 3 to 4 years of ownership, the extra RAM and storage are genuinely worth it — especially given the long software support life of this phone.
This review reflects hands-on impressions and official specifications as available at time of writing. Prices and offers are subject to change. For current pricing always check Amazon India or iQOO.com directly.
© 2026 TechNewsAI · technewsai.me
More Google reviews on Tech News With AI
All reviews tested in India by Mallikarjun R • technewsai.me
Browse by category
X
LinkedIn