Infinix Gt 50 Pro debuts with MagCharge Cooler 2.0, 144Hz AMOLED and 6,500mAh battery

Infinix Gt 50 Pro arrives with Dimensity 8400, 12GB RAM, a 6.78-inch 144Hz AMOLED, MagCharge Cooler 2.0 and a starting price of IDR 6,499,000.

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Infinix GT 50 Pro unboxing

has unveiled the Infinix Gt 50 Pro in Black Abyss, Red Blaze and Silver Glacier, and the company says sales start the day after a unboxing article — with a starting price of IDR 6,499,000 (about $376 / €330).

The new model ships in two memory trims, 12/256GB and 12/512GB, and arrives in the box with a 45W charger, a USB cable and a case that includes a magnetic ring on the back.

The GT 50 Pro is built around a Dimensity 8400 SoC with an all-big core processor, backed by 12GB of LPDDR5X RAM and UFS 4.1 storage, and it offers either a 6,500mAh or a 6,150mAh battery depending on the configuration. Charging options include 45W wired, 30W wireless and 10W reverse wired charging, and the phone supports a wireless bypass charge mode that sends power directly to the motherboard while gaming.

Infinix also introduced a new accessory: the MagCharge Cooler 2.0. The cooler attaches magnetically to the back, and Infinix says it is an industry first for a device that can deliver 15W of wireless charging while providing 12W of thermoelectric cooling. The GT 50 Pro includes a dynamic RGB light array integrated into its HydroFlow liquid cooling system, which spans 6,437mm².

The handset’s 6.78-inch AMOLED screen runs at 144Hz and is rated for up to 4,500 nits of brightness by Infinix. A separate hands-on report from measured the AMOLED at 1224×2720 pixels with a 144Hz refresh rate and recorded a peak brightness of 1,600 nits, and noted the unit tested featured a Kevlar-inspired back, dual-SIM slots, a fingerprint sensor and Gorilla Glass 7i.

Gaming features are prominent: shoulder triggers offer 10 levels of adjustable pressure sensitivity and 8 mapping points, can be used to launch apps and control camera zoom, and are called Open-Cut Pressure GT Triggers by CGMagazine. The phone also supports Dolby Atmos Immersive Audio for the first time on an Infinix device, according to that same report.

Early benchmark and comparison pieces position the GT 50 Pro above the GT 30 Pro in Infinix’s gaming lineup. reports the GT 50 Pro uses a MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultimate and recorded an AnTuTu V11 score of 1,808,355 versus 1,538,799 for the GT 30 Pro; GeekBench multi-core was 5,660 against 3,997; OpenCL 11,833 versus 8,476; Vulkan 11,823 versus 8,725; and 3DMark Wildlife Extreme 3,964 compared with 2,947 for the GT 30 Pro. Those figures underline the brand’s emphasis on sustained performance, thermal control and system-level gaming optimization.

There are a few clear contradictions in the early coverage. Infinix’s own spec claims include a Dimensity 8400 SoC and a 4,500-nit peak, while CGMagazine and WalasTech refer to a Dimensity 8400 Ultimate in their tests and report a lower measured screen peak. The phone is also listed with two different battery capacities, 6,500mAh and 6,150mAh, with no public explanation yet for which markets get which pack.

For buyers, the GT 50 Pro’s combination of magnetic cooling that doubles as wireless charging, a high-refresh AMOLED, shoulder triggers and the company’s wireless bypass charging creates a package aimed squarely at mobile gamers who prize sustained performance over short benchmark bursts. Sales begin immediately after the , so availability and which battery trim ships where are the next immediate questions buyers should watch.

The most consequential unanswered question is whether the MagCharge Cooler 2.0 and the HydroFlow system can deliver the sustained thermals Infinix promises in extended real-world gaming sessions — if they do, the GT 50 Pro could reset expectations for how much cooling and charging innovation midrange gaming phones can pack at an IDR 6,499,000 starting price.

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