![]() ![]() Sadly, however, despite our best efforts at shouting “ROG Phone, TRANSFORM” at the handset it did nothing. Its design is termed “futuristic” on Asus’ website – and indeed, it looks like a seething, illuminating Decepticon. The ROG Phone features a 6-inch FHD+ AMOLED display with HDR screen tech loaded up and a 90Hz refresh rate. Touch-sensitive AirTriggers that act as left and right gamepad buttons, on-screen hardware stats, in-game recording and streaming, recordable macros, an arsenal of accessories – this phone is most definitely for the players. What it does bring to the party, however, may be more important than any of those: killer gaming features. ![]() That said, its specs across the board don’t trounce the competition – the screen refresh rate is 90Hz, as opposed to 120Hz on the Razer Phone series, while the ROG Phone doesn’t have wireless charging, and it doesn’t even feature the latest version of Android. It also doesn’t forgo the 3.5mm headphone jack in favor of USB-C wired audio, and it features AMOLED display technology, not LCD. Our reviews definitely fall in the latter camp, and while that didn’t work out too well for the Razer Phone 2, which scored a respectable but not excellent 3.5 out of 5, Asus’ ROG Phone phone is just… better.įor starters, it has more storage – 128GB in the cheapest variant, which is double that of the Razer Phone 2’s (and the iPhone XS series’) starting capacity. Gaming phones like the Razer Phone 2 and ROG Phone can be hard to review – do you judge them based on their gaming chops or as day-in, day-out smartphones? ![]()
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