Redmi A3x price and specs via Revu Philippines

Redmi A3x with Android 14, 6.71-inch 90Hz screen takes after the Redmi A3

In Phones by Alora Uy GuerreroLeave a Comment

It was not only the Redmi 13 4G that became official recently; the Redmi A3x got listed on Xiaomi‘s global site as well.

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Think of the smartphone as the Redmi A3 — except that it relies on a Unisoc T603 chipset instead of a MediaTek Helio G36 mobile platform and does not offer a version with a matte leather-like-textured back.

You still get a 6.71-inch LCD screen with an HD+ resolution and support for 90Hz refresh rate for compatible apps, a battery rated at 5,000mAh, and Android 14 with Xiaomi’s MIUI skin on top. You won’t miss out on new features or security fixes with the company promising two Android updates and three years of security patches for the A3x. Imaging is taken care of by an 8-megapixel dual camera on the back and a 5-megapixel sensor on the front. And there’s a side-mounted fingerprint sensor here.

What’s more, the Redmi A3x is a looker. Like the A3, it sports a large circular camera module that takes after the flagship Xiaomi 14 Ultra model.

No price has been announced just yet. However, keep in mind that in the Philippines, the A3 cost from P3,399 (around $58) at launch, so the Redmi A3x will most likely be in that price range as well.

Redmi A3x specs

  • 6.71-inch LCD display, HD+ resolution, 90Hz refresh rate
  • 12nm octa-core Unisoc T603 4G processor
  • 3GB/4GB LPDDR4X RAM
  • 64GB/128GB eMMC 5.1 storage
  • Dual 8-megapixel main, auxiliary rear cameras
  • 5-megapixel front camera
  • Side fingerprint reader
  • 5,000mAh battery with 10-watt USB-C charging
  • Android 14
  • Colors: Midnight Black, Moonlight White, Aurora Green

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Alora Uy Guerrero

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Editor-in-chief: Alora Uy Guerrero is a 24-year media veteran who has survived the newsrooms of giants like Yahoo and a high-stakes detour into OPPO's digital marketing. She eventually returned to her journalism roots to helm REVU. A strict advocate for quality over quantity, Alora lives by a family-first philosophy — mostly because her babies are the only bosses she can't negotiate with. When she isn't chasing kids or deadlines, she's probably traveling, shooting, or passionately over-analyzing her favorite bands, films, and basketball teams.