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Review: Just like a Note 7, but not as deadly
The new Mi Note 2 is a flagship, but it’s not the priciest phone in Xiaomi’s range – that distinction goes to the bezel-less Mi Mix. It’s not the cheapest Xiaomi device based on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 821 platform, either. That would be the Mi5s series. So where does the Mi Note 2 fit in? Well, had it not been for the Mi Mix concept phone, the Note 2 would have been Xiaomi’s ultimate flagship for 2016, but it’s not. And that’s sort of a good thing, but we’ll get to that later.
Behold! The glass-clad Mi Note 2 in all its glory. Wait? Is that the Samsung Galaxy Note 7? Did Xiaomi rips off Samsung’s suicidal flagship?
Not exactly. For starters, Samsung doesn’t exactly have a monopoly on curved phones, and it hasn’t tried to patent basic geometric shapes like some of its competitors. Secondly, Xiaomi was actually the first vendor to pull off a curved glass design on the back of the device. Samsung was the first to do a curved screen. The Note 2 does both and does it well. Besides, it launched just a few weeks after the Note 7 debacle, so no, Xiaomi didn’t exactly have time to rip off the Samsung’s industrial design.
But enough with the aesthetics. Let’s see what’s under the bonnet. The Note 2 sports Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 821 SoC, 4GB to 6GB of LPDDR4
Now for some bad news.
You can’t get premium materials and top-end hardware for peanuts. While Xiaomi has a reputation for building powerful budget smartphones and quasi-flagships, the Note 2 isn’t a budget device, and it’s by no means cheap. Prices start at about $ 550 for the 4GB/64GB model, making it the most expensive Xiaomi we had a chance to test so far. Hopefully, we’ll get our hands on the Mi Mix soon, and this will no longer be the case.
So yeah, the Note 2 is a proper flagship, and the price reflects this. In fact, it costs almost twice as much as an entry-level Mi5s, with the same processor and storage, so it’s not cheap by any standard.
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