Sony Xperia Pro-I review
Pro or otherwise, Xperias all have the same UI
The Pro-I may not be strictly in the mainstream Xperia lineup, but it's just like any other when it comes to UI. And like any other, it's got a very stock Android feel (still on Android 11), though there are in-house bits if you look deep enough.
Starting with some of the basics, there's an always-on display feature (AOD) that goes by Google's Ambient display name and has a fairly limited set of customization options. The lockscreen is business as usual with a clock (that you can customize), a shortcut to the camera and another one for Google Assistant.
Always on display • Lockscreen
The homescreen, too, is as standard as they come. The Google feed is the leftmost pane, but you can disable it if it's not your thing. The quick toggles/notification area is Google's stock too. With this version of Android, you get Notification history and the Bubbles shortcuts as part of the Conversations features - both available on the Xperia, unlike some more heavily customized UIs.
Homescreen • Folder view • App drawer • Notification shade • Quick toggles • Notification settings
This brings us to one of the Sony exclusives, which deserves a mention even though it's not new - Multi-window switch. You can access it from the task switcher or from the dedicated shortcut icon on the homescreen, and you get sort of like two stacked task switcher rolodexes with your currently opened apps to pick one for the top half and one for the bottom half of the screen. The rightmost pane in each half lets you launch another app, not just pick from the already running ones.
The phone remembers three previously used pairs so you can access them directly, though we couldn't find a way to save custom app pair presets. It's worth mentioning that the window split can be done in almost any arbitrary ratio, not just 50/50.
Task switcher • Multi-window switcher
Side sense is another of the in-house Sony features. A handle on the side of the phone opens up a menu of shortcuts to apps and features, most of them user-configurable. The 21:9 multi-window pairs can be customized here, but they don't go into the three pair shortcuts in the regular task switcher. A recent addition to the menu is a widget to control the Sony headphones app - handy if you have a set of those.
There's a fairly standard set of gestures for call handling, as well as a one-handed mode and smart backlight control. It's in this menu that you'll find the navigation options with the two basic types available - gestures or a navbar.
Pros can enjoy the occasional game too, so the Xperia Pro-I has Sony's Game Enhancer as part of its software package. It's a comprehensive utility with two main interfaces - a game hub/launcher, and an overlay you pull out from the side while in a game.
Performance profiles (or Game Mode) can be set on a per-game basis, and it's in here that you get to set the screen refresh rate and lock it at 120Hz regardless of whether the game supports it (though, obviously, it would make sense on the games that do). Additional sliders let you select Touch response speed and touch tracking accuracy.
H.S. power control is the setting that deals with power management. When the feature is enabled, and the phone is plugged in, it won't actually charge the battery but will only essentially meet your current power consumption so as to avoid unnecessary heat generation - H.S. stands for Heat Suppression.
The Focus settings is an array of toggles that let you disable pesky notifications, turn off adaptive brightness, disable the camera button and the side sense functionality - limit distractions.
There are also screenshot and video capture features.
Synthetic benchmarks
The Xperia Pro-I has the Snapdragon 888 inside, just like the 1 III - Sony didn't bother implementing the SD888+, and it's hardly a big deal. A single RAM/storage configuration is available, and we believe the 12GB of RAM and half a terabyte of storage are just right.
As is usually the case with Xperias, the Pro-I isn't a benchmark champ, but it's still putting out the flagship-grade numbers you'd expect from its hardware. Aside from the single-core GeekBench, that is, where the Pro-I is sharing a joint victory with the Xperia 1 III.
GeekBench 5 (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
Asus ROG Phone 5
3710 -
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
3673 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
3636 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
3549 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
3540 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
3521 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
3518 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
3515 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
3316 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
3244 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
3191
GeekBench 5 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
Sony Xperia 1 III
1130 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
1129 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
1126 -
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
1126 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
1126 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
1117 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
1117 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
1110 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
1109 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
1107 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
926
The Pro-I goes back to its happy place a little bit down the chart in Antutu, still ahead of the Xperia 5 III.
AnTuTu 9
Higher is better
-
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
797484 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
794016 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
749132 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
735588 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
725839 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
708394
The Pro-I fares better in onscreen graphics benchmarks than phones with 1440p displays thanks to rendering at 1096x2560 - no 4K gaming here (as if you need that on your phone). The Xperia is no gaming phone though, and the ROG Phone 5 does beat it, but then so does the Zenfone 8 Flip.
GFX Manhattan ES 3.1 (offscreen 1080p)
Higher is better
-
Asus ROG Phone 5
122 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
120 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
119 -
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
118 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
116 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
113 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
113 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
111 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
109 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
109 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
107
GFX Manhattan ES 3.1 (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
104 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
103 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
103 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
92 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
91 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
90 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
60 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
58 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
58 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
57 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
55
GFX Car Chase ES 3.1 (offscreen 1080p)
Higher is better
-
Asus ROG Phone 5
71 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
70 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
70 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
70 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
69 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
69 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
69 -
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
69 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
68 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
66 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
64
GFX Car Chase ES 3.1 (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
62 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
59 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
59 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
54 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
53 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
51 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
36 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
34 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
33 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
33 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
33
GFX Aztek Vulkan High (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
45 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
43 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
42 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
29 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
27 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
26 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
25 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
25 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
24 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
23
GFX Aztek ES 3.1 High (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
41 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
40 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
40 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
37 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
36 -
Sony Xperia 1 III
36 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
24 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
24 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
23 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
23
In 3DMark, the Xperia Pro-I climbs back up to the top of the chart, just barely beating the ROG Phone 5 by a handful of points - insignificant, but it works for bragging rights.
3DMark Wild Life Vulkan 1.1 (offscreen 1440p)
Higher is better
-
Sony Xperia 1 III
5807 -
Sony Xperia Pro-I
5753 -
Asus ROG Phone 5
5744 -
Sony Xperia 5 III
5742 -
OnePlus 9 Pro
5701 -
Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G
5691 -
Asus Zenfone 8 Flip
5677 -
Xiaomi Mi 11 Ultra
5676 -
Oppo Find X3 Pro
5653 -
Asus ROG Phone 5s Pro
5556 -
Galaxy S21 Ultra 5G (Snapdragon)
5547
What the Xperia Pro-I can't brag about is sustained performance. That 3DMark result is only in the first run, and by the 6th one, the score drops to 3,900 with a further dip at the 12th loop to around 3,400 points for a stability rating of 60%. The CPU stability is a little bit better, with a 68% result in the CPU Throttling test.
Reader comments
- Mr. Volinski
- 03 Oct 2023
- nDx
I'm sorry but... if you're not a PRO photographer and you buy this for the camera.... again I don't understand who would ever buy this mediocrity. Is there such a thing as under processed? Cause if it is, then this is it. Sony thought,...
- chiropter
- 12 May 2023
- PD@
Ultimately, it is because Korea, which manufactures Galaxy, and Japan, which owns Sony, are on extremely bad terms.
- LHC
- 06 Dec 2022
- nq3
What ? how :D, I had Xperia sola for 5 years, and now its been couple of years that my sister is using it as a music player, so I think it really depends on how well you keep it, you need a Doogee or something, I don't think any other phone can ...