Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. Features

These are two of the most confusing Android phones I’ve used in 2024

Add as a preferred source on Google

The Poco F6 Pro and Poco F6 on a table.
The Poco F6 Pro (left) and Poco F6 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Poco isn’t a smartphone brand many may have heard of, but those who have will mostly associate it with bright, colorful gaming phones. That’s not the case for the Poco F6 and Poco F6 Pro, Poco’s two latest devices that are surprisingly mature in appearance, yet still furnished with some of the customary design flair expected from the brand.

Recommended Videos

However, despite sharing a name, the two F6 phones are really different. It’s quite hard to work out which one is the real star just from looking at the specification sheets, as there are interesting things about both. When they arrived, I had my SIM card in the Google Pixel 8a, so which new Poco phone should replace it? I used them both to find out.

Poco F6

The Poco F6 rear panel.
Poco F6 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

I was very intrigued to try the Poco F6 due to it using the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 processor, which is one I’ve not experienced yet. The slightly misleading name indicates it’s a high-end chip, but it’s really a mishmash of various old Snapdragon 8-series chips assembled like a “greatest hits” version for reasonably priced Android phones. This actually sounds pretty good. So, is it?

I’m using the 12GB RAM Poco F6 model, and it’s a great performer. Playing Asphalt 9: Legends on the highest in-game settings, at full brightness and in Poco’s Ultimate gaming mode setting, didn’t cause any issues, and the game was smooth, fast, and exciting. It’s capable of running the 3DMark benchmarking app’s ray tracing-infused Solar Bay Stress Test, and it looked flawless on screen. It certainly made the phone warm to the touch, but not hot, and it sailed through the test. My first experience with the Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 is a very positive one, and the Poco F6 seems to be a great mobile gaming partner.

A person holding the Poco F6 showing the screen.
Poco F6 Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The lightweight plastic body (just 179 grams) and big 6.67-inch AMOLED screen help boost its gaming credentials, and the dual speakers sound great, too. Encased in the sparkly rear panel are two cameras — a 50-megapixel Sony IMX882 main camera with optical image stabilization and an 8MP wide-angle camera. The Poco F6 isn’t a camera superstar. Coming from the Pixel 8a, which has an excellent camera, I found the F6’s photos inconsistent, as they often showed dull or inaccurate colors, while the noisy, pixelated wide-angle camera was an inevitable disappointment.

One hidden feature that is unique to the F6 is Contactless Gestures, which is found under the Active Visual Perception menu on the phone. It lets you wave your hand in front of the selfie camera to control music, answer and end calls, and scroll through documents. It only works with a few Poco standard apps and Netflix and is considerably slower and less convenient than touching the screen, but it was a nostalgic throwback to phones like the LG G8 ThinQ, right down to it not working very well. It’s odd it’s not included on the Poco F6 Pro.

Elsewhere, it has a 5,000mAh battery with 90-watt charging (the charger is included in the box), 5G and NFC connectivity, an IP64 water- and dust-resistance rating, a 120Hz refresh rate, and Xiaomi’s HyperOS software based on Android. I found Poco’s interface over HyperOS busy and distracting, and was immediately put off by the many bright colors (it’s like it was designed with crayons) and multiple preinstalled apps.

The Poco F6 is a good start, but my SIM stayed firmly in the Pixel 8a. Would the Poco F6 Pro change that?

Poco F6 Pro

The back of the Poco F6 Pro.
Poco F6 Pro Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The Poco F6’s Snapdragon 8s Gen 3 turned out to be a highlight of the phone, but what about the Poco F6 Pro? My interest was piqued by the 50MP main camera, listed as a Light Fusion 800 sensor, which I’ve not seen before. Would it improve over the disappointing Poco F6’s camera? It does, but not in the way I’d want, and it definitely hasn’t encouraged me to swap from the Pixel 8a either.

The Light Fusion 800 main camera is joined by another poor 8MP wide-angle camera and a useless 2MP macro camera, so just because the F6 Pro has an additional camera on the spec sheet, don’t assume it’s better. The main camera amps up the saturation compared to the F6, but also increases the noise. It’s a rather unrefined camera in general, with detail crushed under the weight of overexposure in bright conditions or lost in murky contrast levels. I’ve only taken a handful of photos with each new Poco phone, but neither has impressed or pushed me to go out and take more.

The Poco F6 Pro's screen.
Poco F6 Pro Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

The F6 Pro has a solid, reliable Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 processor inside and not the Snapdragon 8s Gen 3. It’s a familiar, efficient, and impressive performer, so I had no concerns using the phone. There’s also faster 120W wired charging for the 5,000mAh battery. The 6.67-inch, 120Hz AMOLED screen has a 3200 x 1440 pixel resolution and is brighter than the F6’s screen — and it’s all wrapped up in a very cool metal and glass body, with an eye-catching, cracked ice-like effect on the back.

It’s certainly a step up from the F6, but the phone is heavier at 209 grams, and for some reason, it does not have an IP rating to improve durability. The same HyperOS software and Poco interface are installed. While I prefer the design of the Poco F6 Pro and trust the Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chip, outside of the brighter, higher-resolution screen, the Poco F6 will probably satisfy most people looking for a midrange phone that’s not all about the camera.

Using the Poco F6 Pro underlined why I wasn’t sure which of the two I should dedicate the most time to using, as its name and on-paper camera spec should make it the more desirable and more exciting of the two. However, the Poco F6 has some additional features that add value, and because neither camera is very good, I couldn’t find many reasons to stick with the F6 Pro.

More confusion, as usual

It was confusing to look at the different spec sheets and try to decide which new Poco phone to spend the most time with, as both have interesting aspects. I split my time evenly and discovered the Poco F6 is the better phone of the two, with little aside from the screen to sell me on using the F6 Pro. But even working this out hasn’t meant the confusion has ended. Irritatingly, these two phones aren’t unique in Xiaomi’s extensive catalog.

Poco is part of the Xiaomi family, although exactly how closely the companies work together isn’t clear. The fact is the Poco F6 and Poco F6 Pro are very closely related to two other Xiaomi phones — the Redmi Turbo 3 and the Redmi K70. Both of these also use Xiaomi’s HyperOS software, but with the MIUI interface and not Poco’s eye-gougingly colorful one. So when we started out, there was a choice of two phones, but now, you’ve got a choice of four phones.

This level of confusion isn’t new to Poco due to its complicated relationship with Xiaomi, and which you choose will likely come down to where you live, what’s available, and which brand “speaks” to you (and your wallet). On that subject, at the time of writing, Poco has not confirmed the price and availability of either the F6 or F6 Pro, but we will update this article when we know more.

After all this time spent trying cameras, processors, and software, which phone do I think you should go out and try? That’s easy, it’s the Google Pixel 8a.

Andy Boxall
Andy has written about mobile technology for almost a decade. From 2G to 5G and smartphone to smartwatch, Andy knows tech.
The memory crisis isn’t going to ease, and you will pay the price for it, says a research firm
Forty to 50% higher this quarter, 30 to 40% more next quarter, and no real relief until 2028. Plan accordingly.
RAM memory chips

If you were hoping the memory crisis was about to ease up, I have some bad news for you. It comes directly from Wall Street.

Your next smartphone, laptop, or tablet could cost even more, regardless of whether it has recently been subject to a price hike.

Read more
Screens before age two may come with serious developmental risks, study warns
Using a phone or a tablet to keep your baby occupied is not a good idea.
Kid using an iPad

Screens have become the digital pacifier for many babies. Phones and tablets are used during feeding, bedtime, chores, and moments when parents need a break. A major new study now warns that regular screen use before age two may carry developmental risks.

Researchers from four UK universities say babies and toddlers under two should avoid regular intentional screen time. The review links higher screen exposure in the first two years with sleep problems, language delays, behavioural difficulties, obesity risk, short-sightedness, and later problems with friendships and social interactions.

Read more
I tried the AI-powered Extend photo trick in iOS 27, and it blew past my expectations
The Extend feature won't fool everyone, but for casual social media edits, it's surprisingly easy to rely on.
Photography, Wood, Electronics

I wasn’t among the first to install the iOS 27 developer beta, but once I did, I began appreciating the changes Apple has made. The Photos app, in particular, has received one of its most substantial upgrades, adding an improved Clean Up tool, Spatial Reframing, and the new Extend feature, the one I was most eager to try. 

After spending some time with it on my iPhone 17, here’s how the tool has performed so far. Spoiler alert: it’s one of the most substantial additions to Apple’s previously slim lineup of AI features. I’ve tried the feature on several different photos, including a selfie I took in front of a dam in northern India, photos of food items on a table, and shots taken indoors and outdoors.

Read more