4,416,758 points is the number RedMagic wants mobile gamers to notice: the new RedMagic 11S Pro+ can hit that score on AnTuTu V11, putting it above the top phone on AnTuTu’s latest monthly flagship chart, according to Notebookcheck.
RedMagic has launched the 11S Pro series in China with two new gaming smartphones, led by a Pro+ model built around an overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 configuration. The benchmark result matters because RedMagic’s pitch is not subtle: peak Android performance, aggressive cooling, and gaming-first hardware.
4,416,758 Points Put the RedMagic 11S Pro+ Above AnTuTu’s Latest Flagship Chart Leader
The headline device is the RedMagic 11S Pro+, which AnTuTu says can reach 4,416,758 points on AnTuTu V11. Notebookcheck says that is higher than the top-performing phone on AnTuTu’s latest monthly flagship phone chart.
That does not automatically make it the best gaming phone in real use. Benchmarks reward short bursts of peak performance, while games expose heat, power draw, frame pacing, and software tuning over time.
Still, this is a clean marketing win for RedMagic. The company now has a fresh benchmark figure to put behind the 11S Pro+ before its expected international push.
| RedMagic 11S Pro+ detail | Source-backed status |
|---|---|
| AnTuTu V11 score | 4,416,758 points |
| Chipset | Overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 / Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Leading Edition |
| Honor of Kings result | 145.5 FPS average |
| Display | 144Hz AMOLED, 1,800 nits peak brightness rating |
| Expected global battery spec | 7,500mAh with 80W fast charging |
| International timing | More details expected before the May 27, 2026 event |
RedMagic’s timing also keeps the pressure on the next launch milestone. MLXIO previously flagged the international timing question in our RedMagic 11S Pro global launch preview, but the source material here stops short of confirming a full global launch on May 27.
Overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Turns Thermals Into the Real Test
The Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 Leading Edition is the core of this result. In simple terms, RedMagic is chasing higher peak output than a standard flagship setup, and the Pro+ appears tuned to let the chip stretch harder inside a gaming phone shell.
That is where heat becomes the story. AnTuTu reportedly said the phone reached its score without getting excessively hot. If independent testing confirms that, it would be a meaningful improvement over the non-S RedMagic 11 Pro series phones, which Notebookcheck describes as notorious for exceeding safe thermal levels when they detect a benchmark app is running.
MLXIO analysis: This is the part that matters more than the number itself. A phone that posts a huge AnTuTu score while staying controlled thermally is more credible than one that spikes, throttles, or behaves differently when a benchmark is detected.
RedMagic’s gaming identity is built around that trade-off. Buyers in this category expect high frame rates, fast touch response, big batteries, and cooling hardware that can survive long sessions rather than just short synthetic runs.
145.5 FPS in Honor of Kings Shows Promise, but 144Hz Support Is Not Universal
AnTuTu also reports that the RedMagic 11S Pro+ can maintain an average of 145.5 FPS in Honor of Kings. That aligns neatly with the phone’s 144Hz AMOLED display and gives RedMagic a real game metric to pair with the synthetic benchmark score.
The caveat is important. Notebookcheck says 144Hz refresh rate support for other major games, including Genshin Impact, still does not appear to be available.
That does not mean the phone will perform poorly in those titles. AnTuTu’s shared benchmark reports reportedly show good 1% low frame rates, which points to smoother play and fewer severe dips.
For gaming phones, 1% lows can be more useful than peak FPS. A high average frame rate looks good on a chart, but frame drops decide whether a demanding fight feels stable or choppy.
This is also where launch-cycle uncertainty matters. Hardware brands often reveal performance claims before every practical detail is nailed down, a pattern MLXIO has also tracked in Honor Win Turbo’s preorder-first rollout.
7,500mAh Battery and 80W Charging Could Decide the Global Reception
Beyond the chipset, the expected global model is said to carry a 7,500mAh battery with 80W fast charging. Those specs matter because an overclocked chip and high-refresh gaming display can chew through power if tuning is loose.
The display is another major part of the package: a 144Hz AMOLED panel rated at 1,800 nits peak brightness. For a gaming phone, that puts RedMagic’s emphasis squarely on responsiveness and visibility rather than camera-first priorities.
What remains unknown is the international pricing, market availability, and how closely the global variant matches the China model in real-world behavior. Notebookcheck says more details should emerge before the May 27, 2026 event.
Independent reviews will need to test the parts AnTuTu cannot settle alone:
- Sustained performance: Whether the Pro+ holds frame rates after longer sessions.
- Thermals: Whether the “not excessively hot” claim survives outside benchmark conditions.
- Battery life: How the 7,500mAh pack handles high-refresh gaming.
- Charging behavior: How 80W fast charging affects heat during use.
- Game support: Whether more major titles get full 144Hz support.
The near-term read is clear: RedMagic 11S Pro+ has one of the strongest benchmark claims in the current Android gaming-phone cycle. The May 27 event now becomes the checkpoint for whether that 4.4 million-plus AnTuTu score turns into a phone global buyers can actually buy, test, and trust under load.
Key Takeaways
- The RedMagic 11S Pro+ posts a standout AnTuTu V11 score that strengthens its gaming-performance pitch.
- Its overclocked Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 setup and cooling focus target users who prioritize peak Android gaming performance.
- Real-world gaming results may still depend on sustained thermals, power draw, and software tuning beyond benchmark scores.










