Important day for Xiaomi. The company has just made official the Xiaomi Redmi K70, Redmi K70 Pro and K70e, three proposals that dance between the mid-range and the high-end and that are strong candidates to arrive as terminals in our country.
These proposals are powered by next-generation processors from MediaTek and Qualcomm, so let's try to discover who is who in this triad of devices that aim to be top sellers.
The Redmi K70 and K70 Pro share quite a few similarities. At the design level, it is the first time that the terminals embrace metal. Its sides, now flatter, look more premium, along with a rear part finished in glass. The memory configurations are also virtually identical. Curiously, both start from 12 + 256 GB, a configuration worthy of the highest range.
The screen is also the same, with a second generation OLED with peak brightness of 4,000 nits, 2K resolution, 120 Hz and compatibility with both Dolby Vision and HDR+ content. The pixel density is 526ppi and the panel comes from TCL, with its C8 range. Touch sampling is also brutal, at 2,160 Hz.
The important thing about the screen is to understand its fine print. The brightness that we will really appreciate in automatic is the HBM brightness, the maximum peak it reaches for most situations. Here we are talking about 1,200 nits, so the 4,000 nits will be restricted to very small areas of the screen under HDR content. In automatic, the brightness is even a little low. It remains to be seen under the sun what these displays actually look like.
Regarding autonomy, we are talking about 5,000mAh batteries with 120W fast charging, with the promise of fully charging the device in just 18 minutes.
The biggest change is in the processor, since we are talking about a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 for the POCO K70 Pro, while the K70 "settles" with a Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 that has given life to almost the entire high-end range.
The K70E is the younger brother, with a practically identical design, but specs below what we just saw. The terminal does not have metal in its finish, although it is similar in design. The processor in this case is the recently introduced MediaTek Dimensity 8300, in its Ultra version. However, memory configurations remain unusually high, with a base starting at 12 + 256 GB.
The battery also changes, which loses fast charging to gain capacity. In this case we are looking at a 5,500mAh battery, noticeably larger than the one we see in its older brothers. Fast charging is 90W, a more than decent figure. The camera is indeed a significant downgrade, with a higher resolution but lower ambition sensor, and with an ultra wide angle of only 8 megapixels.
Like the rest of the family, it comes from the factory with Android 14 based on HyperOS, Xiaomi's new operating system based on Android that replaces MIUI.
As usual, the prices of these terminals in China make us smile. We are talking about just over 400 euros for the Pro model, about 300 euros for the K70 and just 255 euros for the Redmi K70E.