Senin, 24 Oktober 2016

Xiaomi Mi 5s review: Ever changing

Introduction

The Mi 5 went on sale in April and the market has changed quite a bit since then. While Xiaomi is having a very successful year so far, especially with the mid-range Redmi series, the competition in the higher-end is unprecedented. In the wake of the Galaxy Note7 demise, the iPhone 7 release, and the V20 stepping up LG's game, Xiaomi is shifting the spotlight back to the Mi flagships with its new Mi 5s and Mi 5s Plus updates.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

The Xiaomi Mi 5s takes after where the Mi 5 left off and makes a few notable steps to improve its flagship status - it switches to the latest Snapdragon 821 chip, ups the base storage, and the most obvious change - it retires the glass panels in favor of a metal unibody.

The main camera is one of the highlights of the series, and while the Mi 5s wasn't treated with the dual-camera upgrade, it's sensor is as premium as it can get. Instead of the small 16MP 1/2.8" sensor, the Mi 5s offers a bigger 12MP 1/2.3" one. The sensor's pixels grew 40% bigger thanks to the bigger estate and smaller resolution, which will help the Mi 5s resolve more detail and capture more light in the long run.

Finally, there is more battery juice available to the new MIUI 8 and, in combination with the power-efficient Snapdragon 821 chip, our expectations are quite high.

Now let's see what's new and what's old in the key features list.

Key features

  • 5.15" IPS LCD display of 1080p resolution; 428ppi; Force Press (128GB model only)
  • Snapdragon 821 chipset (2x 2.15 GHz and 2x 1.6GHz cores), Adreno 530 GPU; 3/4GB RAM
  • 64GB/128GB storage
  • 12MP f/2.0 main camera with phase detect autofocus, dual-tone LED flash; 2160p video at 30fps; 1080p@120fps
  • 4MP f/2.0 front-facing camera, 1080p video recording at 30fps
  • Cat.12 4G LTE (600Mbps); Dual-SIM; Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac; Bluetooth 4.2; NFC; GPS, GLONASS and Beidou
  • Android 6.0 Marshmallow with MIUI 8
  • Fingerprint scanner
  • 3,200 mAh non-removable battery, fast charging

Main disadvantages

  • No microSD expansion
  • No adequate screen protection
  • Sealed battery
  • No optical image stabilization
  • No FM radio, no IR blaster, no stereo speakers

So far, so good. The Mi5s, however, is not all about upgrading. While the design and some of the hardware bits are now better compared to the Mi 5, some of the good stuff was axed, too, such as the camera's Optical Image Stabilizatoon (OIS), the Gorilla Glass 4 on the screen, as well as the IR port. The force press support on the other hand is exclusive to the 128GB model only so few people would get to enjoy the feature.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

The rest of the omissions are hardly a surprise to any Mi fan. Xiaomi only puts microSD slots on its more affordable phones and they hardly have a phone with a user-removable batery so we didn't expect otherwise in both these respects.

Enough talking, the Mi 5s is ready to pop out of the box and introduce itself. Follow us after the break with the unboxing and our traditional hardware checkup.

Special thanks to HonorBuy.com for providing the review unit.

Unboxing the Xiaomi Mi 5s

Xiaomi Mi 5s comes in a rather small box, which contains only the basics - a USB Type-C cable and a wall plug. Luckily, the provided charger supports QuickCharge 3.0, so you won't need to buy a new one.

Unboxing the Xiaomi Mi 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Unboxing the Xiaomi Mi 5s

Xiaomi Mi 5s 360-degree spin

Xiaomi Mi 5s spreads at 145.6 x 70.3 x 8.3 mm, which is just a millimeter taller, wider, and thicker in comparison with the original Mi 5. The Mi 5s has gained some weight, though, due to the design shift towards metal. The phone now weighs 145g, 16g heavier than the Mi 5.

Design

Xiaomi Mi 5s looks a lot like the Mi 5, or at least we thought that at first. It has curved sides all around its back, while the entire front is covered in glass. So far so good.

Xiaomi MI 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi MI 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi MI 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi MI 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Xiaomi MI 5s

Then again, we remembered the glass and ceramic editions of the original Mi 5 and that's when we stopped staring at this beauty and realized Xiaomi switched from glass to metal. And that's a great thing.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

Some tests on YouTube has revealed how fragile the Mi 5 really was and we are glad Xiaomi worked to improve on that by opting for an aluminum unibody. And it didn't make it cheap with huge antenna strips on the back, instead it did just like Apple and HTC by letting tiny rubber lines flow around the metal covering all the phone's antennas.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

The metal body and its pleasant matte finish improved the grip by a mile, while the extra weight is welcome as it makes the Xiaomi Mi 5s feel a lot more solid.

The Mi 5s, thanks to its 5.15" screen, is still a very compact phone and a pleasure to handle. It fits easily in any pocket or purse and the newly improved grip will make shooting pictures and images easier (and surely, less prone to accidents!).

Handling the Mi 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Handling the Mi 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Handling the Mi 5s

Controls

Xiaomi Mi 5s has a pretty standard set of controls. Above the screen is the earpiece flanked by a couple of sensors and the 4MP selfie camera.

Above the screen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review below the 5.15
Above the screen � below the 5.15" display is the trio of capacitive keys

Below the display is the familiar trio of capacitive controls. The Home key has an embedded always-on fingerprint scanner within its surface and its reaction time is blazing-fast. The Task Switcher and Back keys are market by two tiny dots with white backlighting.

The left side of the Mi 5s has the dual-SIM tray, while the right one houses the volume rocker and the power/lock key.

The left side - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the SIMs bed - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the right side - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the keys are made of metal - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The left side � the SIMs bed � the right side � the keys are made of metal

The analog audio jack us lonely at the top, while the bottom of the Mi 5s packs the USB Type-C port surrounded by two symmetrical grilles - one for the primary mic and one for the loudspeaker.

What's on top - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the audio jack - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the bottom - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the grilles look nice - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
What's on top � the audio jack � the bottom � the grilles look nice

Finally, the new 12MP snapper is on the back accompanied by a two-tone LED flash. The second mic is also around, embedded within the antenna band.

The back of the Mi 5s - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the new 12MP camera - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The back of the Mi 5s � the new 12MP camera

Display

The Xiaomi Mi 5s features a 5.15" IPS display of 1080p resolution, similar to the one utilized by the original Mi 5. A density of 428ppi is more than respectable and leaves the Snapdragon 821 chip with power to spare on tasks and productivity, so we don't mind the lack of Quad HD resolution.

Unfortunately, Xiaomi didn't mention any specific glass protection for the screen and we can confirm the Gorilla Glass 4 is gone for good. The Mi 5s acquired lots of big scratches on top of its display just in the week we had it for a review. We suggest that you apply a screen protector on it as soon as you take the phone out of its box.

Other than that, the screen offers great viewing angles and there is hardly any color shift or contrast loss when looking the Mi 5s display at an angle.

Xiomi Mi 5s review

Xiaomi claims the screen will provide up to 600 nits of max brightness. Our test results confirmed and even exceeded the claim for maximum brightness as we measured 650nits worth of luminance.

The minimum display brightness is 1.1nits, which is perfectly suitable for late-night reading in a dark room and it's even lower than the Galaxy S7's. The screen's contrast ratio is excellent as well at 1294:1, though slightly less than the promised contrast ratio of 1500:1.

Display test100% brightness
Black, cd/m2White, cd/m2Contrast ratio
Xiaomi Mi 5s0.516601294
Xiaomi Mi 50.516281227
Samsung Galaxy S70.003918
Samsung Galaxy S7 max auto0.005638
Apple iPhone 70.355611603
Apple iPhone 7 (max auto)0.406561640
nubia Z110.435131196
ZTE Axon 70.003528
Sony Xperia XZ0.375021349
Sony Xperia XZ (max auto)0.466081336
Meizu PRO 60.0136040000
HTC 100.294281543

When it comes to color rendering, the Mi 5s has an excellent color rendering with an average DeltaE of 3.5 and a maximum deviation of 4.5 in the gray color. If all colors stay below 4, the screen is considered to be of perfect calibration level accuracy and the Mi 5s almost achieves that.

Note that we did our color test in Standard (constant) screen mode. If you opt for the Auto one, you will get punchier colors at the expense of color calibration.

Finally, the bright screen of the Xiaomi Mi 5s performed excellently in our sunlight legibility test, too. Posting a very high value for a non-AMOLED panel, the Mi 5s ranks the same as its predecessor.

Sunlight contrast ratio

  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge+
    4.615
  • Samsung Galaxy S7 edge
    4.439
  • OnePlus 3
    4.424
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    4.376
  • HTC One A9
    4.274
  • Samsung Galaxy Note7
    4.247
  • Samsung Galaxy A3
    4.241
  • ZTE Axon 7
    4.154
  • Samsung Galaxy S6 edge
    4.124
  • Samsung Galaxy Note5
    4.09
  • Huawei Nexus 6P
    4.019
  • Vivo Xplay5 Elite
    3.983
  • OnePlus X
    3.983
  • Oppo R7s
    3.964
  • Apple iPhone 7
    3.964
  • Huawei P9 Plus
    3.956
  • Samsung Galaxy A7 (2016)
    3.918
  • Samsung Galaxy C5
    3.911
  • Samsung Galaxy C7
    3.896
  • Samsung Galaxy A5
    3.895
  • Samsung Galaxy J7 outdoor
    3.879
  • Samsung Galaxy J2 outdoor
    3.873
  • Samsung Galaxy A8
    3.859
  • Samsung Galaxy A9 (2016)
    3.817
  • Motorola Moto X (2014)
    3.816
  • Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016) outdoor mode
    3.802
  • Xiaomi Redmi Pro
    3.798
  • LG V20 Max auto
    3.798
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    3.795
  • Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
    3.789
  • Apple iPhone 6s
    3.783
  • Meizu Pro 5
    3.781
  • Microsoft Lumia 650
    3.772
  • Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
    3.756
  • Oppo F1 Plus
    3.709
  • Vivo X5Pro
    3.706
  • Sony Xperia X Compact
    3.694
  • Apple iPhone SE
    3.681
  • Samsung Galaxy A7
    3.679
  • Meizu PRO 6
    3.659
  • BlackBerry Priv
    3.645
  • Apple iPhone 7 Plus
    3.588
  • Apple iPhone 6s Plus
    3.53
  • Samsung Galaxy J3 (2016) outdoor mode
    3.523
  • Samsung Galaxy J3 (2016)
    3.523
  • Acer Jade Primo
    3.521
  • Microsoft Lumia 950
    3.512
  • Oppo R7 Plus
    3.499
  • nubia Z11
    3.466
  • Samsung Galaxy J7
    3.422
  • Meizu MX5
    3.416
  • LG V20
    3.402
  • Oppo R7
    3.320
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    3.276
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    3.240
  • Samsung Galaxy J2
    3.235
  • Sony Xperia X Performance
    3.234
  • Motorola Moto X Play
    3.222
  • Huawei P9
    3.195
  • Lenovo Vibe Shot
    3.113
  • Motorola Moto X Force
    3.105
  • LG Nexus 5X
    3.092
  • Huawei Mate S
    3.073
  • Microsoft Lumia 640 XL
    3.065
  • Sony Xperia X
    2.989
  • Samsung Galaxy Note
    2.97
  • Huawei Mate 8
    2.949
  • Xiaomi Redmi 3S
    2.913
  • Sony Xperia XA Ultra
    2.906
  • LG G5
    2.905
  • HTC One S
    2.901
  • Sony Xperia Z5
    2.876
  • Microsoft Lumia 550
    2.851
  • Xiaomi Redmi 3 Pro
    2.803
  • Sony Xperia Z5 compact
    2.784
  • LG V10
    2.744
  • Xiaomi Redmi 3
    2.735
  • Sony Xperia M5
    2.69
  • Huawei P9 Lite
    2.679
  • Vivo V3Max
    2.659
  • Xiaomi Mi 4i
    2.641
  • Sony Xperia XA
    2.609
  • Xiaomi Mi 4c
    2.574
  • LeEco Le Max 2
    2.567
  • Microsoft Lumia 640
    2.563
  • Lenovo Moto G4
    2.544
  • Oppo F1
    2.528
  • Sony Xperia Z5 Premium
    2.525
  • Huawei Honor 7 Lite / Honor 5c
    2.506
  • Sony Xperia M4 Aqua
    2.503
  • Oppo F1s
    2.481
  • Motorola Moto G
    2.477
  • Lenovo Vibe K5 Plus
    2.473
  • Huawei G8
    2.471
  • Huawei nova
    2.467
  • Sony Xperia Z
    2.462
  • Lenovo Vibe K5
    2.459
  • Huawei Honor 7
    2.406
  • Sony Xperia E5
    2.386
  • ZUK Z1 by Lenovo
    2.382
  • HTC 10
    2.378
  • Samsung Galaxy J5 (2016)
    2.378
  • Huawei nova plus
    2.329
  • HTC One E9+
    2.305
  • Alcatel One Touch Hero
    2.272
  • Apple iPhone 4S
    2.269
  • Lenovo Vibe K4 Note
    2.254
  • Sony Xperia C5 Ultra
    2.253
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 3 (MediaTek)
    2.249
  • Sony Xperia C4 Dual
    2.235
  • Xiaomi Mi Note
    2.234
  • Motorola Moto G (2014)
    2.233
  • LG Nexus 5
    2.228
  • Huawei P8
    2.196
  • Huawei Honor 6
    2.169
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 2
    2.166
  • OnePlus Two
    2.165
  • HTC One X
    2.158
  • LG Aka
    2.145
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note 4
    2.145
  • Archos 50 Diamond
    2.134
  • Xiaomi Redmi Note
    2.119
  • Acer Liquid X2
    2.084
  • Huawei P8lite
    2.078
  • Moto G 3rd gen max manual
    2.026
  • Xiaomi Mi Max
    1.996
  • Sony Xperia E4g
    1.972
  • OnePlus One
    1.961
  • Meizu m3 note
    1.923
  • Meizu m2 note
    1.892
  • BlackBerry Leap
    1.892
  • HTC Butterfly
    1.873
  • ZTE Nubia Z9 mini
    1.759
  • Sony Xperia U
    1.758
  • Asus Zenfone Selfie
    1.68
  • Motorola Moto E (2nd Gen)
    1.675
  • ZTE Nubia Z9
    1.659
  • Jolla Jolla
    1.605
  • Motorola Moto E
    1.545
  • Sony Xperia M
    1.473
  • HTC Desire C
    1.3
  • Sony Xperia C
    1.283
  • Meizu MX
    1.221
  • Sony Xperia E
    1.215

Battery life

The Xiaomi Mi 5s is powered by a 3,200mAh battery, which seems more than enough for a 5.15" device. It's also 200mAh beefier than the one inside the original Mi 5.

We ran our battery test, and the Xiaomi Mi 5s scored an 84h rating, which means you can count on the battery to last three and a half days if you do an hour each of calling, web browsing and video playback a day.

While the browser and video playback times are similar to the one we got from the Mi 5, the call test and the standby performance turned out a bit lesser and thus the reason for the lower final rating.

If you want to use the phone with two SIM cards, you'll end up with an 80h rating.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

While the rating is quite good for a flagship, we are a bit disappointed. The Mi 5s should have brought us better battery life thanks to its bigger battery, energy-efficient chipset, and optimized MIUI 8, but apparently - this didn't happen.

The battery testing procedure is described in detail in case you're interested in the nitty-gritties. You can also check out our complete battery test table, where you can see how all of the smartphones we've tested will compare under your own typical use.

Connectivity

The Xiaomi Mi 5s supports 9 LTE bands, and you can tap to an LTE network on either SIM, but once you do, the second one will be limited to GSM connectivity only. As for that, the Mi 5s also offers quad-band GSM connectivity. There is quad-band 3G connectivity with HSPA support.

The rest of the connectivity features include single-band Wi-Fi a/b/g/n/ac support and Wi-Fi Direct. There is also support for Bluetooth 4.2, NFC, GPS with GLONASS and Beidou.

There is no FM radio support.

Xiaomi Mi 5s comes with USB Type-C port. Media transfer mode is supported for accessing the phone's built-in memory over a USB connection. The port also supports USB On-the-go for connecting USB peripherals such as pen drives, keyboards or USB hard drives, but you'll need to buy a proper adapter for that.

Wireless screen mirroring is available via the Miracast protocol.

There is no IR blaster on the Mi 5s. The MiRemote app is on board, but it can only control smart devices connected to the same wireless network.

MIUI 8 on sweet Marshmallow

The Xiaomi Mi 5s comes with Android Marshmallow and MIUI 8.0. MIUI is one of the most comprehensive customizations of Android to date. It has a big following in China where Google services are not accessible so Xiaomi refocused the ecosystem away from Mountain View's services. For those living elsewhere, there are various international (global) ROMs, which come stripped from the Chinese services, in favor of Google's.

We are reviewing the Mi 5s with 64GB storage and 3GB RAM, which means the phone lacks pressure sensitive screen. The feature is exclusive to the 128GB/4GB RAM flavor only, so we can't explore MIUI's take on 3D Touch.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

MIUI 8 starts off with a fresh overhaul on the visuals but the new icons, color scheme, and animations are more of a refinement rather than a departure. But the looks are just a minor part of the way MIUI is different from stock Android.

MIUI 8 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review MIUI 8 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review MIUI 8 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review MIUI 8 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review MIUI 8 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
MIUI 8

The highlights of the new features are Dual Apps and dual spaces. Dual Apps means you can have two instances of the same app on your device, so you can, for example, have two WhatsApp accounts on the same phone, one for each SIM, something you couldn't do before.

Dual apps settings - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Dual apps - the second instance is market with a special icon - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Dual apps settings � Dual apps - the second instance is market with a special icon

Any app can become a dual-app - you just need to enable it from settings. The second instance has a yellow indication on its app icon, so you'll always know which instance you are opening.

Dual spaces lets you have two different workspaces on your device, each with its own set of apps, customizations, and image gallery, and you can enter a custom passcode or a different fingerprint to enter either of the space.

Space 1 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Space 1 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Space 2 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Space 2 - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Space 1 � Space 1 � Space 2 � Space 2

Configuring a second space is very easy and straightforward. After setting a different PIN and/or fingerprint, you can import and share photos, files, and apps between the two spaces, or choose to keep those entirely separated. You can also opt to view notifications from the other space, so you won't miss anything.

Configuring Two Spaces - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Configuring Two Spaces - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Configuring Two Spaces - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Configuring Two Spaces - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Configuring Two Spaces - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Configuring Two Spaces

Switching between those spaces is hassle-free (you even get a Switch shortcut in the notification drawer), but far from blazing-fast. The Snapdragon 430 and its 2GB RAM aren't the best configuration to handle the switch in an instant - it takes a few seconds depending on the opened apps and shared content.

There are more novelties in MIUI 8. The Phone app and Caller ID are smarter than before now. There is also a brand new Gallery app, a new Notes app, new advanced image and video editors, and a new Quick Ball function that puts a hovering circle on the side of the display that houses quick shortcuts to various functions.

Touching Quick Ball pops up to 5 shortcuts and you can put here pretty much anything - from Android actions to app shortcuts. The Ball can also hide automatically on chosen apps, and move aside when you are running a fullscreen app.

Quick Ball - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Quick Ball - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Quick Ball - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Quick Ball

The lockscreen is fairly standard (time, notifications, a couple of shortcuts), but once you set up the fingerprint reader, you'll rarely see it anyway. Still, the Wallpaper Carousel can put beautiful images on the lockscreen every 15 minutes.

The always-on fingerprint sensor proved quite accurate and can take the phone from sleep to homescreen pretty quickly (the lockscreen is bypassed). It's as fast as some of the latest flagship implementations, which is quite a treat.

The lockscreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The lockscreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The lockscreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The lockscreen

MIUI has a simple philosophy - every shortcut, plus widgets of your choosing, are dropped on the homescreen. You get a docked menu for the most commonly used apps, of course. The homescreen also supports wallpaper carousel, you can enjoy different beautiful wallpapers all the time.

The Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Homescreen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The Homescreen

The notification drawer sees the biggest visual change, with a consolidated list of quick toggles, notifications, and a weather panel at the top that changes color and animation according to the weather.

The notification drawer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The notification drawer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The notification drawer

The app switcher feels like it came out of iOS - apps are either represented by their icons, in a single horizontal row, or by appropriate thumbnails in the same manner.

The Task Switcher - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Task Switcher - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Task Switcher - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Task Switcher - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The Task Switcher

Themes are fully supported and several are available out of the box. You can download more - they change wallpapers, lockscreen style, system icons and font, sounds too.

Theme store - Xiaomi Mi 5s review downloading a theme - Xiaomi Mi 5s review a new theme - Xiaomi Mi 5s review a new theme - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Theme store � downloading a theme � a new theme

Finally, MIUI 8 supports scrolling screenshots - the feature lets you take a screenshot of an entire page by scrolling and combining multiple images into one long screenshot that you can then crop to your liking.

Creating a scrolling screenshot - Xiaomi Mi 5s review the result - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Creating a scrolling screenshot � the result

Performance

The Xiaomi Mi 5s runs on the latest Snapdragon 821 chipset with 3GB of RAM. There is a more powerful Mi 5s model with 4GB RAM and double the storage, too.

The Snapdragon 821 SoC improves on its predecessor with better power efficiency and higher performance. You can't have both at the same time though - the manufacturers can either opt for the slightly higher processor and GPU frequency for about 10% performance bump (as is the case with the Mi 5s Plus phablet), or keep the original clocks in order to gain better battery life.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

Xiaomi chose the latter for the Mi 5s and thus it offers the same quad-core Kryo processor with two cores ticking at 2.15GHz and two running at 1.6GHz as its 64GB Mi 5 sibling. The Adreno 530 GPU is also clocked at the same 624MHz frequency as the one inside the Snapdragon 820.

There is no doubt the Snapdragon 820, and now 821, are among the most popular choices for the flagship crop, so even without running benchmarks, you can rest assured the Mi 5s is a beast.

But we're not the kind of reviewers that work with assumptions, so we sure did run our fair share of benchmarks. Join us as we dig into those scores and framerates.

A single Kryo core shows a rather uninspiring result within the GeekBench 4 benchmark, but it's on par with the competition, except for the A10 processor in the iPhone 7. It also doubles the performance of the Cortex-A53 inside the Huawei nova.

You can also notice the 10% promised gap between the 2.1GHz Kryo inside the Xiaomi Mi 5s and the 2.4GHz Kryo CPU inside the Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus.

GeekBench 4 (single-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    3488
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    1854
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
    1815
  • Huawei Honor 8
    1720
  • OnePlus 3
    1719
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    1682
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    1578
  • Huawei nova
    842

The four Kryo cores combined do great, as usual, but they can't compete with the combined power of the eight cores inside the Honor 8 (4xA53 + 4xA72), or the dual-core A10 Fusion CPU inside the iPhone 7.

The 10% bump on the Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus is once again clearly visible in the multi-core results, which means Qualcomm fully delivered on its 10% performance jump.

GeekBench 4 (multi-core)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    5654
  • Huawei Honor 8
    5447
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    5245
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s Plus
    4333
  • OnePlus 3
    4045
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    3987
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    3868
  • Huawei nova
    3105

Moving on to Basemark OS II 2.0 to look at some numbers representing overall performance. Here the Mi 5s is in a group with its Mi 5 brother and the OnePlus 3, running on the same chips. It did a notch better compared to all other devices we've tested but the iPhone 7, which might be due to a faster storage or more efficient MIUI 8.

Basemark OS 2.0

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    3416
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    2378
  • OnePlus 3
    2365
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    2180
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    2151
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    2128
  • Huawei Honor 8
    2099
  • Huawei P9
    2068
  • LG G5
    2065
  • Sony Xperia X
    1714
  • Huawei nova
    1218
  • Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
    833

Antutu is also showing the Mi 5s in a good light - it outs the same scores as all S820 devices we've tested so far, though the OnePlus 3 has some supremacy here.

AnTuTu 6

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    174532
  • OnePlus 3
    141764
  • LG G5
    134541
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    132084
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    131758
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    131666
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    124266
  • Huawei P9
    98069
  • Huawei Honor 8
    94892
  • Sony Xperia X
    77537
  • Huawei nova
    65021
  • Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
    35689

On the graphics front, the Mi 5s does an excellent job with Basemark X scores, beating all smartphones we've put through it so far. The Adreno 530 is indeed a mighty performer.

Basemark X

Higher is better

  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    36240
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    33110
  • OnePlus 3
    32715
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    32345
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    29548
  • LG G5
    29456
  • Huawei P9
    16942
  • Huawei Honor 8
    16592
  • Sony Xperia X
    15087
  • Huawei nova
    10511
  • Samsung Galaxy A5 (2016)
    4947

The BaseMark ES 3.1 test is also available on the iPhones, where the iPhone 7 is ruling the chart by miles. The Mi 5s does about the same as the other Adreno 530-powered smartphones, but behind the Galaxy S7's Mali-T880MP12 GPU.

Basemark ES 3.1 / Metal

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    1547
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    732
  • OnePlus 3
    625
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    588
  • LG G5
    587
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    580
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    577
  • Huawei Honor 8
    345
  • Huawei P9
    341
  • Sony Xperia X
    251
  • Huawei nova
    138

The GFX tests reveals that the Mi 5s raw performance is on par with the other Snapdragon 820/821 devices, and can be bested only by Apple's A10 GPU.

GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    43
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    31
  • OnePlus 3
    31
  • LG G5
    30
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    30
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    28
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    26
  • Huawei P9
    10
  • Huawei Honor 8
    10
  • Sony Xperia X
    9.2
  • Huawei nova
    6.3

GFX 3.1 Car scene (offscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia XZ
    20
  • OnePlus 3
    18
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    17
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    16
  • LG G5
    16
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    15
  • Huawei P9
    6.5
  • Huawei Honor 8
    6.3
  • Sony Xperia X
    5.3
  • Huawei nova
    3.5

The Mi 5s has an advantage over some of its competitors such as the Galaxy S7 and the LG G5, because of its lower screen resolution. The Adreno 530 is a monster when displaying 1080p resolution, though still not monster enough to beat the iPhone 7 Plus (also 1080p).

GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Apple iPhone 7
    60
  • Apple iPhone 7 Plus
    42
  • Sony Xperia XZ
    32
  • OnePlus 3
    30
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    29
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    26
  • LG G5
    15
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    15
  • Huawei Honor 8
    11
  • Huawei P9
    11
  • Sony Xperia X
    10
  • Huawei nova
    6.5

GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)

Higher is better

  • Sony Xperia XZ
    19
  • OnePlus 3
    18
  • Xiaomi Mi 5
    17
  • Xiaomi Mi 5s
    16
  • LG G5
    8.8
  • Samsung Galaxy S7
    7.9
  • Huawei P9
    7.1
  • Huawei Honor 8
    6.9
  • Sony Xperia X
    5.9
  • Huawei nova
    3.7

Xiaomi Mi 5s delivers flagship-grade performance, there is no denying that. The phone runs cool at all times.

The thing is Xiaomi may have overstressed the importance of having the Snapdragon 821 chip, as the chipset used for the Mi 5s has literally the same performance as its 820 predecessor.

Telephony

The dialer and the phonebook share a single app although there are two shortcuts, bringing you straight to the tab you need. The app has pleasant flat looks, though somewhat refreshed. It uses a tabbed interface - recent with dialer on the first and the contact list on the second.

Call recording is available - the files can be saved either on your device or on your MiCloud.

The Phonebook - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Phonebook - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Phonebook - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Phonebook - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The Phonebook

The dialer may look rather familiar, but it's quite capable. Unfortunately, most of the new smart features are only available in a few markets such as China and India.

It can recognize automatically business numbers, as well as scam contacts thanks to the Xiaomi's Caller ID database. You can also search in both Hindi and English from the T9 numpad, which is helpful. And if you live in those countries, you can use the integrated Yellow Pages option.

The Dialer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Dialer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The Dialer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The Dialer

The Xiaomi Mi 5s speaker scored a Very Good mark on our loudness test. Its sound quality was just average though and if it weren't for the peak notes, it would have outed an Average score at best. You should add vibration for your notifications for sure.

Speakerphone testVoice, dBPink noise/ Music, dBRinging phone, dBOverall score
Sony Xperia XZ61.665.567.6Below Average
HTC 10 (Music mode)63.166.774.3Average
Xiaomi Mi 566.967.274.0Good
Samsung Galaxy S769.569.371.1Good
OnePlus 362.471.077.8Good
Apple iPhone 767.673.275.7Good
Xiaomi Mi 5s64.270.084.9Very Good
Xiaomi Mi Note75.968.983.3Excellent

Other apps

The Xiaomi Mi 5s offers an excellent file managing app called Explorer, which lets you browse the files in its internal storage and groups them by type.

Explorer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Explorer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Explorer - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Explorer

The MIUI v8 also offers a Security app. It can scan your phone for malware, manage your blacklist, manage or restrict your data usage, configure battery behavior, clean some RAM; it can also manage the permissions of your installed apps.

The Security app has a new feature now - it allows you to define the battery behavior of selected apps and apply restrictions only to the apps you choose.

Security app - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Data management - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Battery management - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Managing a single app - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Battery Saver - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Security app � Data management � Battery management � Managing a single app � Battery Saver

The custom and now flat Calendar looks good, syncs with your accounts including Google, and offers Day and Month views.

Calendar - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Calendar - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Calendar

There is also the standard sound recorder, flashlight, clock, and weather apps, among others, that are a given in any self-respecting Android package nowadays.

Voice recorder - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Alarms - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Clock - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Weather - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Voice recorder � Alarms � Clock � Weather

We liked the Compass app. It has very nice and clean interface, shows the magnetic directions and doubles as a level meter. If you lift the phone up, then you'll get a nice augmented reality view with real-time East/West/North/South overlay.

Compass - Xiaomi Mi 5s review level - Xiaomi Mi 5s review VR directions - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Compass � level � VR directions

Finally, there is a brand-new Notes app. It has been given new templates, new look, support for checklists, among other things.

The Calculator app has been updated - it now supports advanced calculations and conversions.

Notes - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Notes - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Calculator - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Conversions Menu - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Conversions - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Notes � Notes � Calculator � Conversions Menu � Conversions

The gallery

The Xiaomi Mi 5s and its MIUI 8 comes with a redesigned Gallery app, now showing more photos on the screen than ever. It defaults to your camera roll, but it also supports different albums.

Xiaomi's new app now automatically stacks your photos in Camera, Video, People, Screenshots, and Panoramas albums. The People sorting, once chosen, sorts all of your photos by people's faces.

The MIUI 8 gallery seems to have borrowed some of the iOS Photos looks, but nevertheless it's better than before and we appreciate the new looks and features.

Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Gallery

The new integrated editor powered by Camera 360 offers various filters, crop options, enhancements (sharpen, contrast, brightness, saturation, vignette), and doodles. Oddly, this image editing app is less capable than the one supplied with the MIUI v7.

Editing an image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Editing an image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Editing an image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Editing an image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Editing an image

Xiaomi Mi 5s may or may not come with a standalone video app depending on your ROM. Either way, you'll get a rather basic app or section in the Gallery, where you can browse and play all of your videos. The video interface is very basic; subtitles and pop-up play are not supported.

If you live in China, you will definitely get a proper Video app and it comes with paid streaming services on top of its basic functionality for offline browsing.

Browsing and playing videos - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Browsing and playing videos - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Browsing and playing videos - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Browsing and playing videos

There is also a new video editor with MIUI 8. It supports trimming, filters, and adding text, and audio tracks.

Video editing within the gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Video editing within the gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Video editing within the gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Video editing within the gallery - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Video editing within the gallery

Music player

The MIUI music player is a custom app with a well laid out, easy to navigate interface. The player has cool effects, transitions, and transparent elements, especially on the expandable Now Playing section. Lyrics are supported, too.

In some markets a streaming service similar to Google Play and Apple Music comes as part of the Music app, too.

Music Player - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Albums - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Songs - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Now Playing screen - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Options - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Music Player � Albums � Songs � Now Playing screen � Options

Xiaomi Mi 5s offers customizable equalizers within the phone's Settings menu - there are a few default presets already available for use. You can also try Xiaomi's MiSound enhancer, which comes into play when you use headphones, and especially, a Xiaomi-branded headset.

Audio enhancements and equalizers - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Audio enhancements and equalizers - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Audio enhancements and equalizers - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Audio enhancements and equalizers - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Audio enhancements and equalizers - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Audio enhancements and equalizers

Audio output starts off great, degrades with headphones

The Xiaomi Mi 5s delivered downright impressive output when hooked up to an active external amplifier. The flagship was not only able to match the best for clarity, it also delivered splendidly high volume for one of the best performances we�ve seen.

Unfortunately, degradation with headphones was quite pronounced with stereo crosstalk plummeting, volume levels dropping to just above average and some distortion creeping in. A rather mediocre showing here.

Anyway, here go the results so you can do your comparisons.

TestFrequency responseNoise levelDynamic rangeTHDIMD + NoiseStereo crosstalk
Xiaomi Mi 5s+0.01, -0.03-89.690.20.00290.040-85.5
Xiaomi Mi 5s (headphones)+0.71, -0.31-82.984.80.2290.559-48.0
Xiaomi Mi 5+0.01, -0.03-95.395.10.00340.0065-95.1
Xiaomi Mi 5 (headphones)+0.01, -0.03-95.295.10.00270.013-71.5
Samsung Galaxy S7+0.01, -0.04-92.592.60.00270.0078-92.7
Samsung Galaxy S7 (headphones)+0.05, -0.05-91.992.10.00440.063-73.4
Apple iPhone 7+0.06, -0.10-92.492.30.00150.0093-80.9
Apple iPhone 7 (headphones attached)+0.03, -0.11-92.392.30.00110.012-77.0
LG G5+0.01, -0.04-92.692.60.00510.0096-93.3
LG G5 (headphones)+0.05, -0.01-92.292.30.00290.037-50.7
Sony Xperia Z5+0.01, -0.04-95.589.50.00330.012-94.8
Sony Xperia Z5 (headphones attached)+0.22, -0.24-95.189.50.00570.212-59.8

Xiaomi Mi 5s frequency response
Xiaomi Mi 5s frequency response

You can learn more about the tested parameters and the whole testing process here.

Camera

The Xiaomi Mi 5s, just like the Google's Pixel flagships, comes with the new 12MP Sony IMX378 sensor. It is not very high resolution - 12.2MP - but it has 1.55�m pixels. Physically, it is a large sensor, too, 1/2.3", matching the Xperia Z series, which pumps out a lot more megapixels than the Mi 5s.

The new IMX378 sensor is an upgrade over the IMX377 used on the Nexus 5X, 6P and HTC 10. It now supports phase-detection autofocus, faster and better HDR processing, higher frame rate support for videos. The highlight of the new optimizations is the handling a big chunk of the image processing on-chip thus reducing the workload on the image signal processor (ISP). The latter helps for shooting and processing HDR photos much faster.

The 12MP sensor has a relatively wide aperture of f/2.0 and a two-tone dual-LED flash. The optical image stabilization from the Mi 5 is gone, though.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

The MIUI 8 camera interface is fairly simple and features toggles for the HDR mode, the flash and the video camera. The available advanced modes are Panorama, Beautify, Scenes, Timer, and Manual (with shutter speed up to 32s) as well as the camera settings. Seventeen live filters are at your disposal, too.

The camera app - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The camera app - Xiaomi Mi 5s review The camera app - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
The camera app

When it comes to daylight shots, the Xiaomi Mi 5s gets a straight A right away. Its camera may not have as many pixels as its Mi 5 predecessor, but the per-pixel quality is very high. Noise is kept low and photos come out rich in detail without being over-sharpened. Even foliage is rendered great.

The captured colors are very accurate, the white balance is right almost every time, and the dynamic range is way above average and definitely flagship-worthy.

Finally, the bokeh effect in the close-up shots is quite nice, too.

Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Xiaomi Mi 5s 12MP camera samples

You'll probably want to leave the HDR mode on Auto, because the new sensor doesn't slow when shooting HDR. The HDR mode has got a massive improvement over the Sony IMX377 sensor, as promised. There is a huge improvement in the restoration of both the highlights and the shadows. Even the digital noise gets lower.

HDR off - Xiaomi Mi 5s review HDR on - Xiaomi Mi 5s review HDR off - Xiaomi Mi 5s review HDR on - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
HDR off � HDR on � HDR off � HDR on

Unfortunately, the low-light photos came rather unimpressive. The Mi 5s had really hard time getting the focus right and when it did, the images came out with poor detail and washed out.

Luckily, you can use the manual mode and tweak the ISO and exposure time settings to achieve better low light sots, but you'll need a small tripod or at least a stable surface for shooting this way. The results are worth the hassle, though.

The dusk shots, on the other hand, turned out OK with average detail and high dynamic range.

A low-light sample - Xiaomi Mi 5s review another low-light image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review using manual settings (4s shutter) - Xiaomi Mi 5s review Dusk shot - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
A low-light sample � another low-light image � using manual settings (4s shutter) � Dusk shot

You can capture both landscape and portrait panoramic photos with a 180-degree field of view. Shooting is easy and the resolution is very high (up to 60MP, 3,800MP tall). The image quality is above average - there is enough detail, no bad stitching and accurate colors. The dynamic range and the resolved detail could have been better, though.

Xiaomi Mi 5s panoramic image - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
Xiaomi Mi 5s panoramic image

Xiaomi Mi 5s features the same 4MP UltraPixel front-facing camera for high-res selfies we met on the Mi 5. The images came out with more than enough detail, high contrast, and pleasant colors. The dynamic range is above average, too. We really like this sensor for selfies.

4MP selfie samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review 4MP selfie samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review 4MP selfie samples - Xiaomi Mi 5s review
4MP selfie samples

The Xiaomi Mi 5s is more than capable of pulling its own weight in our Photo Comparison tool. You can see it puts up an excellent fight against the other snappers we've tested and comes on top even against some far pricier options.

Photo Compare Tool Photo Compare Tool Photo Compare Tool
Xiaomi Mi 5s vs. Xiaomi Mi 5 vs. Samsung Galaxy S7 in our Photo quality comparison tool

Video camera

Video mode gives you a choice of 2160p @ 30fps and 1080p @ 30fps for common shooting with a 720p @ 120fps option if you want some slow-motion effects. There's no 1080p @ 60fps mode though, which would make a big difference for fast-paced scenes. Also, changing resolution involves going to Modes and then in the advanced settings, which isn't all that convenient.

Anyway, the 2160p videos are captured at 42Mbps bitrate and have rock solid 30fps. The audio is stereo captured at 96KBps bitrate.

The video quality is very high, among the best we've seen, with sharp (but not over-sharpened), detailed image. The colors are spot-on, while the dynamic range is above average. The audio quality is OK, there are no traces of compression, but you'll notice it goes towards poor on more demanding scenes (concerts, loud crowds, cars honking, etc.).

1080p videos are shot at 20Mbps bitrate and the same audio. The video quality turned out great for 1080p, also among the best we've seen so far, with great amount of resolved detail, accurate colors, and above average dynamic range. Unlike the 4K samples, the 1080p ones came out a bit over-sharpened, which may not be everybody's cup of tea.

You can also download the 4K@30fps (10s, 50MB) and the 1080p video (10s, 25MB) samples taken straight off the Xiaomi Mi 5s.

The new IMX378 sensor is capable of EIS and it's your only option for the videos since there is no optical stabilization. It works on both 1080p and 2160p videos and doesn't reduce the field of view. The results are a mixed-bag though. The stabilization indeed does a good job most of the time, but there is noticeable stuttering when panning or moving, which eventually ruins the positive first impressions.

It's worth noting the poor stabilization results are not the sensor's fault. We've already tested the Pixel XL, which comes with the same IMX378 sensor and relies on EIS only, and the results were spectacular.

Finally, you can use our Video Compare Tool to see how the Mi 5s stacks against the competition when it comes to video capturing in both 2160p and 1080p modes.

Video Compare Tool Video Compare Tool Video Compare Tool
Xiaomi Mi 5s vs. Xiaomi Mi 5 vs. Samsung Galaxy S7 in our 2160p Video quality comparison tool

Video Compare Tool Video Compare Tool Video Compare Tool
Xiaomi Mi 5s vs. Xiaomi Mi 5 vs. Samsung Galaxy S7 in our 1080p Video quality comparison tool

Conclusion

Xiaomi Mi 5s is a great flagship with excellent build quality, performance, battery life, and imaging skills. It makes a few notable upgrades over the Mi 5 predecessor - a metal unibody, a bigger battery, a more power-efficient chipset, and a capable main camera.

Xiaomi Mi 5s review

But it also loses a few things over the Mi 5 that many would consider crucial - camera OIS and Gorilla Glass protection. The IR port is gone for good, too. So, is the metal body and the new camera sensor worth sacrificing the screen protection and the benefits of OIS for low-light photography?

There is no easy answer to this. The Mi 5s is indeed superb at design, handling, power, and daylight shots. Its new software image stabilization helps the videos, too, but it's not as good as an OIS solution. But then again, people shoot a lot more in daylight rather than low light and the Mi 5s camera is a huge improvement over the Mi 5 regarding image quality.

Long story short - Xiaomi Mi 5s is a true flagship with top-notch capabilities. And if it weren't for the easily scratchable screen, we'd consider it perfect. It's a worthy purchase due to its great pricing, though the Mi 5 owners should probably skip it and wait for the Mi 6 next year as they won't gain much from the 5s iteration.

Xiaomi Mi 5s key test findings

  • Build quality is excellent, and we like the metal unibody more than the glass one. The Mi 5s has stunning looks achieved by shape, choice of materials, slim profile, and lightweight body.
  • The display is great: it offers 650+ nits of brightness, high contrast, and great legibility in direct sunlight. The minimum brightness is superb for night reading, the blacks are deep enough, and the viewing angles are decent. We wish it had a better protection against scratches.
  • Battery life is very good with an endurance rating of 85h, but a step down from the Mi 5 where it should have been an improvement.
  • Rich wireless connectivity options, but no FM radio or IR blaster.
  • MIUI 8 is a clean and light shell on top of Android Marshmallow and offers rich customization options. The new Dual Spaces and Dual apps options are great additions.
  • The Snapdragon 821 chipset offers stellar performance though there is no improvement from the Mi 5 and its S820 chip. If there is anything to note, it runs cool, and there is no apparent overheating or throttling.
  • Audio output starts off great, degrades with headphones. The speaker loudness is very good, but the sound quality is barely average.
  • Camera photos are great, with plenty resolved detail, high dynamic range, and excellent colors and contrast. The new camera produces better shots than the Mi 5 16MP snapper, but lacks optical image stabilization and sometimes that hurts the quality.
  • The picture on the 4K and Full HD videos is excellent with plenty of detail and high contrast, but the 1080p samples came a bit oversharpened. EIS may cause some stuttering in videos and the stereo audio capturing is of poor quality.

There are lots of options to consider if you are looking for a smartphone like the Mi 5s, but you haven't settled on a particular brand.

The compact flagship class, where the Mi 5s falls under, has been flourishing this year. The LG G5 price, for example, has fallen to the Mi 5s levels, and the G5 will give you a better and higher-res display, a unique modular design, and an additional main camera for wide-angle shots.

LG G5
LG G5

LeEco's Le Pro 3 is a good match for the Mi 5s with the same screen resolution, chipset, and a capable camera setup. It's cheaper and offers a bigger screen estate and battery over the Mi 5s, but its availability is quite limited.

LeEco Le Pro3
LeEco Le Pro3

You may want to consider the ZUK Z2 Pro, whose price has fallen quite a bit since its release in June. It will give you an AMOLED screen and 6GB of RAM, powered by a Snapdragon 820 chipset and a 3,000mAh battery. The ZUK isn't among the most popular brands out there, but its unique glass design and launcher may fit you well.

Lenovo ZUK Z2 Pro
Lenovo ZUK Z2 Pro

Finally, there is always the old Mi 5, which has a glass back, a higher-res camera with OIS, and a better battery endurance. And you get these for less cash.

Xiaomi Mi 5
Xiaomi Mi 5

Instead on a high note, we'll end this review expressing our mixed feelings. The Xiaomi Mi 5s is easily likable and ticks all the right checkboxes for a flagship phone. The thing is that we already had that with the Mi 5 and the Mi 5s is an odd successor - it's not necessarily better than the Mi 5, it's just different. As such, it will surely appeal to new users, but it isn't likely to draw those who are looking to upgrade from the Mi 5. And we guess the company is alright with that and we can't blame them. If you are among the brand's fans, just make sure you approach the Xiaomi Mi5s with the right set of expectations.

Special thanks to HonorBuy.com for providing the review unit.

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