Specs Snapshot: A Gaming Phone Aimed Squarely at Esports
On paper, the Infinix GT 50 Pro is built to impress competitive gamers. At its core is MediaTek’s Dimensity 8400 Ultimate chipset on a 4 nm process, paired with 12 GB of LPDDR5X RAM and up to 512 GB of fast UFS 4.1 storage. The 6.78‑inch AMOLED LTPS display supports 144Hz refresh rates and a 330Hz touch sampling rate, with brightness peaking up to 4500 nits for better outdoor visibility. Protection comes via Gorilla Glass 7i and TÜV Low Blue Light certification to ease long grinding sessions. Powering all this is a 6,150–6,500 mAh battery (depending on configuration) with 45W wired and 30W wireless charging, plus reverse charging. Add in Wi‑Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, stereo speakers and an in‑display fingerprint scanner, and the GT 50 Pro looks like a serious 144Hz AMOLED gaming candidate in the mid-range space.

Unboxing, Build and Triggers: How ‘Gamer’ Does It Feel?
Unboxing the Infinix GT 50 Pro reinforces its positioning as a gaming phone. The retail package includes a 45W charger, sturdy USB cable and a protective case with a magnetic ring for attaching Infinix’s MagCharge Cooler 2.0. The phone comes in eye‑catching Black Abyss, Red Blaze and Silver Glacier finishes, with an angular, gamer‑oriented design that weighs 198 g—substantial but still manageable for extended play. A distinctive rear window showcases the HydroFlow liquid cooling visual effect, where coolant movement is simulated for a techy aesthetic. More importantly for esports players, Infinix integrates pressure‑sensitive shoulder triggers along the frame. These Open‑Cut Pressure‑Sense GT Triggers offer up to 10 levels of sensitivity, support multiple mapping points and deliver haptic feedback to mimic physical buttons. Compared to typical mid‑range phones without dedicated gaming controls, this shoulder trigger smartphone feels purpose‑built for shooters and action titles.

Why Cooling, Refresh Rate and Triggers Matter for Mobile Esports Malaysia
For popular mobile esports in Malaysia like MLBB, PUBG Mobile and Call of Duty: Mobile, consistency often matters more than peak benchmarks. The GT 50 Pro’s 144Hz AMOLED gaming panel enables ultra‑smooth motion and quick response, especially valuable in frantic team fights or close‑range gunfights. Its 330Hz touch sampling and super‑fast touch response help reduce input delay, crucial when micro‑adjusting aim or pulling off tight skill combos. The HydroFlow liquid cooling system, with a large 6,437 mm² cooling area and micro‑pump, is designed to sustain performance by managing heat under long sessions, reducing thermal throttling that can cause frame drops. Combined with the large 6,500 mAh battery and features like Wireless Bypass Charging via MagCharge Cooler 2.0, the phone aims to keep temperatures and battery health in check during marathon scrims, ranked grinds and local tournament play common in the mobile esports Malaysia scene.
Real-World Gains in MLBB, PUBG Mobile and CODM
Based on its hardware, Malaysian players can expect the Infinix GT 50 Pro to comfortably handle MLBB at high frame rate modes with stable performance, even in late‑game 5v5 clashes. PUBG Mobile and CODM, which are more CPU‑ and GPU‑intensive, should benefit from the Dimensity 8400 Ultimate’s all‑big‑core architecture and Mali‑G720 GPU, especially when paired with lower or balanced graphics settings while prioritising high or ultra‑high FPS modes. The shoulder triggers can be mapped to ADS, fire, jump or other key actions, freeing up thumbs and improving reaction times in shooters. With configurable pressure sensitivity and haptic feedback, the experience is closer to a handheld controller than a standard touchscreen. While exact frame rates and graphics presets will depend on game optimisation, the GT 50 Pro is clearly tuned to prioritise smooth, sustained FPS over camera tricks or background animations.
Value for Malaysian Gamers and the Rise of Budget ‘Gaming Monsters’
Internationally, the Infinix GT 50 Pro has launched in markets like Indonesia and Ukraine at mid‑range price levels, competing with more expensive gaming‑branded devices. Pricing abroad ranges from ₴22,610 to ₴25,999, with euro pricing starting from €350 for the 12/256 GB variant and €390 for the 12/512 GB model, while Indonesian figures place it against upper‑mid‑tier phones. For Malaysian gamers, this suggests Infinix is targeting value‑hungry esports players rather than premium flagship buyers. The trade‑offs are clear: cameras are solid but not the headline feature, and long‑term software update policies may lag behind top‑tier brands. However, the inclusion of liquid cooling, programmable triggers, large battery and both wired and wireless fast charging is unusual at this class. As more budget “gaming monsters” chase Southeast Asia’s booming esports audience, the GT 50 Pro could become an attractive option if local telcos and retailers bundle it with data plans and game‑focused promotions.
