Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 review
Benchmarking performance
Besides serving as a technology demo for the company's impressive bezel-less display design, the original Mix was also treated to a true flagship specs sheet through and through, for a well-rounded, albeit not exactly easily attainable offer. Now that the Mix 2 is a lot more sensible and likely intended for a wider audience, it only makes sense to stick to high-end flagship internals. After all, €420 is quite a pretty penny in Xiaomi terms, so prospective buyers are rightfully going to expect strong performance to match the stunning exterior.
The Mi Mix 2 does not disappoint. Qualcomm's Snapdragon 835 is still one of the top dogs around. As for memory, while we still stand firm by our belief that 8GB are a total overkill in the current state of Android OS and especially app ecosystem development, there are some potentially viable cases to be made for running 6GB of RAM. With that in mind, it is nice to see that Xiaomi bumped-up its base memory option to 6GB this time around, with 8GB only reserved for the Special edition.
Keep in mind, however, that depending on your personal needs and usage pattern, storage might still be a bottleneck, since Xiaomi skipped on a microSD card slot once again. Still, with both a 128GB and a whopping 256GB Mi Mix 2 variant on offer, it is just a matter of balancing your storage needs and budget.
Starting off with GeekBench and some pure CPU-based synthetic loads, the Snapdragon 835 inside the Mi Mix 2 performs about as expected. We do say "about", since the score is on the lower side. The chart shows that the Mix 2 only managed to outpace the Sony Xperia XZ Premium, based on the same chipset.
GeekBench 4.1 (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8
6656 -
ZTE nubia Z17
6622 -
OnePlus 5
6604 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
6593 -
Huawei Mate 9
6407 -
HTC U11
6393 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
6301 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
6234 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
5460 -
LG G6
4175 -
Google Pixel XL
4113
GeekBench 4.1 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8
1991 -
ZTE nubia Z17
1966 -
OnePlus 5
1932 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
1924 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
1919 -
HTC U11
1919 -
Huawei Mate 9
1859 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
1836 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
1832 -
LG G6
1767 -
Google Pixel XL
1582
It is also clear that there is more to squeeze out of the chip, so there is some room for optimization. Then again, MIUI is far from a pure Android experience, so, we can forgive a small dip in raw performance numbers. Especially when you take into account the synthetic nature of these numbers. In real-life scenarios, the Mi MIx 2 is as fast as they come on the current smartphone scene.
GeekBench 4 (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 5
6404 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
6372 -
ZTE nubia Z17
6275 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
6175 -
HTC U11
6125 -
Huawei Mate 9
6112 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
6106 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
5966 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
5837 -
Huawei P10 Plus
5821 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
4288 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
4278 -
LG G6
4209 -
Google Pixel XL
4152
GeekBench 4 (single-core)
Higher is better
-
ZTE nubia Z17
2065 -
OnePlus 5
2031 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
2013 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
2007 -
HTC U11
1993 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
1945 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
1943 -
Huawei P10 Plus
1937 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
1915 -
Huawei Mate 9
1898 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
1824 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
1815 -
LG G6
1733 -
Google Pixel XL
1507
Moving on to more compound benchmarks, we see a pretty identical picture in AnTuTu. While besting the Sony Xperia XZ Premium by a sizeable margin, the Mi Mix 2 actually falls behind its similarly-specked flagship competitors a bit. Again, this is hardly noticeable in real-world usage.
AnTuTu 6
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
181570 -
OnePlus 5
180331 -
ZTE nubia Z17
178629 -
HTC U11
177343 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
174435 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
168133 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
160319 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
144223 -
LG G6
143639 -
Google Pixel XL
141186 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
140324 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
133242 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
128498 -
Huawei P10 Plus
126252 -
Huawei Mate 9
122826
And just in case our re-assurance that the Mix 2 is a perfectly capable 2017 flagship is not enough, enter Basemark OS 2.0. Just like AnTuTu it is a compound benchmark, basing its score on various component speeds and metrics, including storage and RAM, to name a couple. It is a lot more generous to the Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 while handing out scores. Again, a few hundreds variances aside, the conclusion to make here is that the Mix 2 can successfully throw punches with the other 2017 heavy-weights on the Android scene.
Basemark OS 2.0
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
3612 -
OnePlus 5
3601 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
3578 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
3376 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
3319 -
ZTE nubia Z17
3281 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
3174 -
HTC U11
2970 -
Huawei P10 Plus
2940 -
Huawei Mate 9
2830 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
2381 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
2380 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
2364 -
Google Pixel XL
2281 -
LG G6
2126
What about graphics? The ultra-wide 18:9 aspect ratio is sure to leave its mark on performance? Well, yes and no. In this transitional period as more and more manufacturers start adopting ultra-wide aspects, there is bound to be some turmoil in the graphics and particularly gaming department. Yes, a classic 16:9, Full HD handset, like the OnePlus 5 can definitely squeeze more on-screen frames out of the Adreno 540 GPU.
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
ZTE nubia Z17
63 -
OnePlus 5
60 -
HTC U11
60 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
57 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
54 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
53 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
50 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
50 -
Google Pixel XL
47 -
LG G6
41 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
40 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
38 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
34 -
Huawei Mate 9
30 -
Huawei P10 Plus
28
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
OnePlus 5
56 -
ZTE nubia Z17
56 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
50 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
49 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
47 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
41 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
41 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
36 -
HTC U11
35 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
34 -
Google Pixel XL
30 -
Huawei Mate 9
28 -
LG G6
24 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
23 -
Huawei P10 Plus
19
However, even with more pixels to worry about in one direction, the Mix 2 handles its GPU potential magnificently. It even manages to outperform the Samsung Galaxy S8+ and Galaxy Note8, also avid early adopters of a wider aspect.
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
ZTE nubia Z17
43 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
42 -
OnePlus 5
41 -
HTC U11
41 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
39 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
39 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
37 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
36 -
Google Pixel XL
32 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
30 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
28 -
LG G6
26 -
Huawei Mate 9
22 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
22 -
Huawei P10 Plus
19
GFX 3.1 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
ZTE nubia Z17
41 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
41 -
OnePlus 5
40 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
32 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
32 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
30 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
27 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
23 -
Huawei Mate 9
23 -
HTC U11
19 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
18 -
Google Pixel XL
17 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
13 -
LG G6
12 -
Huawei P10 Plus
12
It is worth mentioning that even though the Mi Mix 2 will likely have more than enough "oomph" for any Android game you throw at it, most are still made for a 16:9 aspect ratio. Unlike its Galaxy rivals, the Mix 2 doesn't have a native solution in place to stretch and crop. If the game does not wish to scale properly, you are left with black bars. Still, gradually, developers will more than likely adapt and deliver more aspect-fluent content on a mass scale.
GFX 3.1 Car scene (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
25 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
25 -
ZTE nubia Z17
25 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
25 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
25 -
OnePlus 5
24 -
HTC U11
24 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
23 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
20 -
Google Pixel XL
19 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
18 -
LG G6
16 -
Huawei Mate 9
13 -
Huawei P10 Plus
12 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
8.4
GFX 3.1 Car scene (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
ZTE nubia Z17
25 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
25 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
24 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
24 -
OnePlus 5
24 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
20 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
17 -
Huawei Mate 9
14 -
Samsung Galaxy S8
13 -
HTC U11
13 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
12 -
Google Pixel XL
11 -
Huawei P10 Plus
9 -
LG G6
8.5 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
4.8
Basemark X features a more diverse mix of tests, complete with plenty of emphasis on off-screen rendering. It is nice to see the Mi Mix 2 still hold its own, even though the benchmark seems to be clearly favouring the Exynos 8895 and the Mali-G71 MP20 in particular.
Basemark X
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8
42370 -
OnePlus 5
38844 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
38507 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
38474 -
HTC U11
38399 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
38349 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
37346 -
Huawei Mate 9
36519 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
36506 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
34951 -
ZTE nubia Z17
33513 -
Google Pixel XL
30861 -
Huawei P10 Plus
30602 -
LG G6
30507 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
22472
Basemark ES 3.1 still has enough pixel-generating potential to bring some modern phones down to their knees. The Mi Mix 2 still holds its own with this load, but with plenty of room for improvement. Perhaps an outdated OpenGL ES 3.1 driver is to blame.
Basemark ES 3.1 / Metal
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy S8
1189 -
Sony Xperia XZ Premium
842 -
HTC U11
836 -
Samsung Galaxy S8+ (SD 835)
817 -
OnePlus 5
796 -
Huawei Mate 9
794 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 9 Beta)
742 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix 2 (MIUI 8)
739 -
Google Pixel XL
626 -
ZTE nubia Z17
619 -
Xiaomi Mi Mix
558 -
Xiaomi Mi Note 2
556 -
LG G6
541 -
Meizu Pro 7 Plus
517
In any case, like we said before, less than stellar scores are no cause for concern. The Mi Mix 2 is nothing short of impressive when it comes to real-world performance.
Reader comments
- AnonD-740699
- 27 Feb 2018
- SYC
Kind of strange. I have the Mi Mix 2 for a couple of months now and while I can see it lasts a bit less than the Mi 5 it replaced, the endurance rating seems suspiciously low - I get 2 full days with moderate usage, sometimes more (the Mi 5 always ga...
- AnonD-391304
- 02 Jan 2018
- fsx
I haven't tried it but it should as it's stock with a locked bootloader.
- Raj
- 02 Jan 2018
- Fvc
May be gsm arena needs to retest battery life. It comfortably gives an endurance rating of more than 80 hrs and that too on dual sim