Xiaomi Redmi 2 review: Spare hand
Spare hand
Performance
Xiaomi Redmi 2 is running on the Snapdragon 410 chip with a quad-core 1.2GHz Cortex-A53 processor, Adreno 306 GPU and 1GB of RAM. There is a slightly more expensive Redmi 2 model with 2GB RAM and doubled internal storage, but that's yet to become officially available.
The Snapdragon 410 is the most affordable chipset from the new 64-bit generation Qualcomm offers. It should provide a slight performance boost over its 32-bit predecessor, the Snapdragon 400, but don't expect miracles.
GeekBench 3 explores the raw multi-core processor performance and it supports 64-bit architecture already. The Redmi 2 posted a respectable score for its class, absolutely on par with all the other Snapdragon 410 devices. It is obviously faster than the four Cortex-A7 cores within the Sony Xperia E3, but no match for eight of those as in the case with the Redmi Note phablet.
GeekBench 3
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
2435 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
1492 -
HTC Desire 510
1471 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
1469 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
1460 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
1460 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
1400 -
Sony Xperia E3
1118
The compound AnTuTu 5 benchmark adds RAM and graphics to the equation and shows pretty much the same results as the GeekBench 3. All Snapdragon 410 devices are doing fine, the Redmi 2 even scores a hair better than the Galaxy A chaps. The octa-core Redmi Note scores noticeably better though, while the Snapdragon 400-running Sony Xperia E3 is behind the curve.
AnTuTu 5
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
32487 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
21581 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
21002 -
HTC Desire 510
20756 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
20616 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
20024 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
19912 -
Sony Xperia E3
18336
Next we ran the compound BaseMark OS II test, which in addition to CPU, GPU and RAM, tests also web and system performances. The Xiaomi Redmi 2 does great here beating all other devices but the Galaxy A5 and A3. We should note that the Galaxy A3 has an edge over the rest S410 devices as it runs on a lower-resolution qHD screen.
Basemark OS II
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy A3
556 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
555 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
509 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
504 -
HTC Desire 510
491 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note
452 -
Sony Xperia E3
417 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
394
BaseMark OS II also provides separate scores for the single and multi-core processor performance. Quite expectedly the octa-core Cortex-A7 in charge of Redmi Note is topping the charts, while the quad-core Cortex-A53 is doing as well as the others.
Basemark OS II (single-core)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
1701 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
1435 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
1420 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
1414 -
HTC Desire 510
1332 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
1217 -
Sony Xperia E3
1171
Basemark OS II (multi-core)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
12771 -
Sony Xperia E3
5697 -
HTC Desire 510
5484 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
5481 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
5313 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
4880 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
4875
We've tested the new Adreno 306 GPU before and it didn't show any improvement over the previous generation Adreno 305. It is weak on the offscreen T-Rex test, beaten by the Adreno 305, but shows equal performance when it comes to Open GL ES 3.0 Manhattan offscreen benchmark.
GFX 2.7 T-Rex (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
9.8 -
Sony Xperia E3
5.9 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
5.7 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
5.3 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
5.3 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
5.3 -
HTC Desire 510
5.3 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
5.2
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (1080p offscreen)
Higher is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi 2
1.8 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
1.8 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
1.8 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
1.8 -
HTC Desire 510
1.8 -
Sony Xperia E3
1.7
Onscreen performance matters the most, of course, as these GPU were made to work best with HD or sub-HD screens. Xiaomi Redmi 2 and Galaxy A5 run on 720p resolution these tests, while the Xperia E3, Galaxy A3 and HTC Desire 510 feature sub-HD screen thus the better fps output.
GFX 2.7 T-Rex (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
Sony Xperia E3
17.1 -
HTC Desire 510
15.5 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note
13.3 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
13 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
12.8 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
10.3 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
9.6 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
9.6
GFX 3.0 Manhattan (onscreen)
Higher is better
-
HTC Desire 510
8.3 -
Sony Xperia E3
8.3 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
6.4 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
6.4 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
3.9 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
3.9
Unfortunately the Basemark X GPU test crashed every time we tried to run it.
Finally, let's check the web browsing performance. The Kraken benchmark is all about Java Script and the Redmi 2 is doing very good, while the compound BrowserMark 2.1 shows it is behind the curve. Of course, if you are unhappy with the default web browser, you can always switch to Chrome or other alternatives.
Kraken 1.1
Lower is better
-
Xiaomi Redmi Note
12416 -
Xiaomi Redmi 1S
12470 -
Samsung Galaxy A5
13083 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
13694 -
HTC Desire 510
14171 -
Sony Xperia E3
16059 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
18323 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
18343
BrowserMark 2.1
Higher is better
-
Samsung Galaxy A5
1171 -
Sony Xperia E3
1044 -
HTC Desire 510
832 -
Xiaomi Redmi Note
588 -
Xiaomi Redmi 2
549 -
Samsung Galaxy A3
465 -
Samsung Galaxy Grand Prime
413
Snapdragon 410 chipset is doing OK in the Xiaomi Redmi 2, providing a proper experience for this price and hardware segment. Sure, some phones are better and the Snapdragon 400 older phones are on par or a hair behind, but at least the Redmi 2 offers better futureproofing with its 64-bit processor.
And for what's worth the MIUI 6 and the Android KitKat run blazing-fast and lag-free on the Xiaomi Redmi 2, as all of its system apps and popular heavy-duty office apps.
Reader comments
- Anonymous
- 18 Sep 2022
- guk
Does redmi 2 have app drawer?
- Johnechono
- 03 Jan 2022
- Nue
Good phone. I still have one .I hope it becomes a vintage and pricey in the future so that I can make good money off it..
- Franx
- 30 Jul 2021
- fuf
This phone is awesome. It's features are still uptodate. Thumbs up Xiaomi!!!