₹30k price bracket. In terms of competition, the OnePlus Nord 4 (Snapdragon 7+ Gen 3) garnered a score of around 1.1 million on Antutu in my tests while the Poco F6 (Snapdragon 8s Gen 3) scored around 1.4 million.On Geekbench 6, the T3 Ultra scored 2,064 on single core score and 5,621 on the multi core score.
Meanwhile, it garnered a best loop score of 12,196 with stability of 52% on 3D Mark's Wild Life Stess Test. The phone did heat up quite a bit during 3D Mark test but the good thing is that I did not notice similar heating issues during day to day usage.While I am not a big gamer but I did play a few popular games like BGMI and Call of Duty Mobile at highest settings and there were no issues to report here.The fast app loading speeds of apps and the general fluidity of the UI did win me over with the T3 Ultra.One thing that definitely hampers the day to day usage is the the hapitcs performance of the phone, with the vibrations being too harsh and resembling that of a budget device.
Moreover, Vivo does not provide any customization option which only leaves the option of turning off the vibration feedback altogether.The 5,500mAh battery on the T3 Ultra can be fully charged from 0-100% in around an hour. This is probably the best battery life I have got in a phone this year, with a consistent screen on time (SoT) of around 8-9 hours.I was skeptical about the camera performance of the T3 Ultra, given my previous experience with the performance phones in this range.
As it turns out, I was pleasantly surprised with the 50MP primary sensor with support for Aura lighting.The primary shooter can take some good looking shots in day time with close to natural looking colours and excellent dynamic range. It does struggle in
. Read more on livemint.com