Under the bonnet, the X Fold 5 is packing some serious firepower. The Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 paired with 16GB of LPDDR5X RAM and 512GB of UFS 4.1 storage means this phone chews through tasks like a caffeine-addled hamster. In real-world terms, it’s more than enough juice for even the most demanding user.
We threw Grid Legends at it, and the game ran as smooth as silk, with no signs of overheating or thermal throttling. To really push our luck, we fired up the Origin Workbench mode. It’s Vivo’s take on the iPad’s Stage Manager that lets you run up to five apps at once. In a fit of pure madness, we ran BGMI and Grid Legends simultaneously. The result? The X Fold 5 didn’t even break a sweat. It’s staggering to see how far mobile processors have come, running two graphically intensive games without a single stutter.
While it can handle any task you can dream up, benchmark purists might note it falls slightly behind the rumoured Snapdragon 8 Elite chip in Samsung’s next-gen Fold. But in the real world, this is a non-issue. The more noticeable hiccup is in the software. While the hardware is perfectly capable of god-tier multitasking, the Funtouch OS 15 software feels a tad underdeveloped. Beyond the nifty Origin Workbench, it lacks the intuitive gesture swipes for quick split-screening that make OxygenOS on the OnePlus Fold such a joy to use. It’s a small niggle, but one that slightly hampers the device’s productivity credentials.
And keeping all this power running is a colossal 6000mAh battery, the largest in any flagship foldable in India, according to Vivo. It utilises some clever second-generation semi-solid battery tech to cram all that power in without adding bulk, and it easily lasts a full day of heavy use.