Poco F8 Ultra Review: A Bold All-Rounder Balancing Gaming, Camera, and Bose-Tuned Audio

PROS:

Bose-tuned 2.1 speaker system
Excellent all-rounder
Large battery with fast wired and wireless charging
Strong main and telephoto cameras

CONS:

An 18mm-equivalent ultra-wide camera is less versatile
Noticeable price increase compared with the F7 Ultra (but mostly justifiable)

RATINGS:

AESTHETICS
ERGONOMICS
PERFORMANCE
SUSTAINABILITY / REPAIRABILITY
VALUE FOR MONEY

EDITOR’S QUOTE:

An expressive all-rounder that excels at games, media, and photography, the Poco F8 Ultra delivers on its premium flagship ambition.

Only about eight months after its first “Ultra” attempt with the Poco F7 Ultra, Poco is already back with the Poco F8 Ultra and its sibling, the F8 Pro. Following the success of the F7 Ultra, this doesn’t feel like a one-off experiment anymore. It feels like Poco is serious about staking a claim in the premium flagship space.

This time, Poco isn’t just chasing raw specs. The F8 Ultra doubles down on performance with the latest flagship chipset, pushes imaging with a new Light Fusion 950 main imaging sensor and 5x periscope camera, and, for the first time, brings in Bose to co-engineer a 2.1-channel speaker system. On paper, it looks like a full-scale all-rounder aimed at gaming, media, and photography all at once. The question is whether it really holds up that premium flagship claim in daily use. Let us dive in and find out.

Aesthetics

The Poco F8 Ultra is visually dramatic in a way many flagships are not, especially the Denim Blue variant I received for review. Poco offers two color options for the global model, a unique Denim Blue and a more classic Black, and the whole design is built around a bold horizontal camera bar across the top of the back panel. This rectangular bump stretches almost from edge to edge, immediately anchoring the look and giving the phone a strong graphic identity. On the Denim Blue model, the bar is finished in silver, while on the Black version, it is blacked out to blend more seamlessly with the rest of the body.

Within this camera bar, the layout is carefully staged. On the left side sit four camera units, each framed by its own silver ring, with the LED flash neatly integrated among them. On the right side, Poco embeds the subwoofer module, marked with a “Sound by Bose” logo at the center, so the audio story becomes a visible part of the design rather than something hidden inside.

Color and material choices reinforce this expressive stance. The Denim Blue variant uses Xiaomi’s third-generation nano tech material, which mimics the depth and weave of fabric while resisting fingerprints and smudges. It has a tactile, layered surface that feels more like tech streetwear than a simple painted back, and while this playful, youthful look will not be everyone’s cup of tea, it gives the phone a distinct, energetic character.

The Black version takes a more understated route with lightweight glass fiber and a refined matte sheen that catches light in smooth gradients. It offers a quieter but still premium look if you prefer something less attention-grabbing, and it is likely to age more discreetly in daily use.

Ergonomics

Ergonomically, this is still a big phone. The Denim Blue variant measures 163.33 x 77.83 x 8.3 mm and weighs 220 g, while the Black version is slightly slimmer and lighter at 163.33 x 77.82 x 7.9 mm and 218 g. In the hand, the difference is subtle, and for my grip, the width in particular makes it a bit of a stretch to reach across the screen, which is worth noting if you have smaller hands or prefer narrower devices.

Both the display and back panel are flat, giving the phone a clean profile. Rounded corners and subtly curved aluminum edges soften the grip and reduce pressure points during long gaming or video sessions, and the weight feels well-balanced along the center line, so the camera module does not make the phone feel top-heavy.

The Denim Blue back adds a gentle grip and naturally hides smudges, which suits case-free use. The matte Black finish feels smoother but is still controlled and resists fingerprints and smears, so it stays looking clean. In both finishes, the textures are chosen as much for comfort and practicality as for style.

The physical controls are also well placed. The volume rocker and power button on the right sit low enough to reach without stretching or shifting your grip, which helps offset some of the phone’s width. The ultrasonic fingerprint reader is positioned about one third of the way up from the bottom of the screen, right where your thumb naturally rests, so unlocking feels quick and effortless.

Performance

Inside, the Poco F8 Ultra runs on Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, Qualcomm’s latest flagship chip. It also includes a dedicated VisionBoost D8 chipset for visual enhancement and game optimization. This secondary chip can push supported game titles up to 120 frames per second, upscale visuals to 1.5K resolution, and apply Game HDR to enrich color. Together, they give compatible games a sharper, smoother, more cinematic feel. Running HyperOS 3 based on Android 16, the phone stays snappy and smooth even when you are multitasking.

Poco F8 Ultra boasts the largest display in the brand’s F series with a 6.9-inch AMOLED panel using Poco HyperRGB.  The screen runs up to 120 Hz in supported apps, so scrolling, animations, and games feel fluid, and combined with high brightness, strong contrast, and deep blacks, it delivers a vivid, high-impact look rather than a muted, neutral one.

The audio side of smartphones is usually overlooked, and most built-in speakers still sound flat. Poco’s partnership with Bose pushes against that pattern. The F8 Ultra uses a 2.1 channel system with stereo speakers and a dedicated bass driver, tuned to emphasize depth and space rather than just volume.

In my experience, Poco’s claims of deeper bass and a wider soundstage hold up. The F8 Ultra delivers a solid, weighty low end that gives music, films, and games more physical presence than most phones in its class. Held in landscape, the stereo image feels wide, with instruments and effects clearly separated instead of merging into a single blob of sound.

You get two Bose-tuned modes, Dynamic and Balanced. Dynamic adds punch and low end for games and action, while Balanced keeps mids a bit cleaner for dialogue and acoustic tracks. On top of that, there are genre-based EQ presets and a custom 10-band EQ from about 141 Hz to 13.8 kHz, so you can fine-tune the sound to your taste.  The speaker system will not replace good headphones, but it clearly raises the bar for built-in phone audio.

On the camera side, the F8 Ultra treats imaging as a proper flagship feature. The 50 MP main camera uses Xiaomi’s 1/1.31 inch Light Fusion 950 sensor with an f/1.67 aperture and optical image stabilization, and it produces vibrant images with wide dynamic range and good detail even in difficult lighting.

The 50 MP 5x periscope telephoto sits at a 115 mm-equivalent focal length with an f/3.0 aperture and OIS. It reuses the same sensor as its predecessor but pairs it with a periscope structure, which allows much higher zoom while better preserving image quality. The result is pleasing compression with natural-looking bokeh and solid dynamic range, especially in good light.

A 50 MP 18 mm-equivalent ultrawide completes the rear trio, although its relatively narrow field of view means you can often just step back and use the main camera for better image quality. The 32 megapixel front camera with its automatic 0.8x wide-angle mode makes group shots easier without forcing you to stretch your arm as far. For video, all three rear cameras support up to 4K 60 FPS, with the main camera also capable of 8K 30 FPS, while the front camera is limited to 4K 30 FPS.

Battery life and charging match the performance focus. Poco finally gives the Ultra line a bigger pack in response to user feedback, with a 6500 mAh battery that is the largest yet in a global Poco F phone. It comfortably handles heavy gaming, media, and camera use across a day, and when you do run low, 100-watt wired HyperCharge, 50-watt wireless charging, and 22.5-watt reverse charging give you flexible ways to top up or share power.

Sustainability

Poco’s approach to sustainability on the F8 Ultra feels more practical than ambitious. Hardware durability is solid, with IP68 water and dust resistance and Poco Shield Glass helping the phone survive daily knocks, drops, and the occasional splash. That kind of protection does reduce the chance you will need an early replacement after a single accident, which is still an important part of using one device for longer.

On the software side, Poco offers 4 major Android OS updates and 6 years of security patches. While that is not class-leading, it is still notable. Some rivals now promise longer OS and security support, reasonably future-proofed. Overall, the F8 Ultra does not stand out as a sustainability champion in either software longevity or broader eco-friendly initiatives.

Value

Poco offers the F8 Ultra in two configurations. The 12 GB RAM and 256 GB storage model is priced at $729, while the 16 GB RAM and 512 GB storage version comes in at $799. During the early bird period, Poco cuts $50 from the base model and $70 from the higher tier, bringing them down to $679 and $729, respectively, which makes the step up to 16 GB and 512 GB particularly tempting.

There is a clear price increase compared to the previous Ultra, but it feels justified by the upgraded display, dual-chip performance stack, camera system, audio, and larger battery. In the current flagship landscape, the Poco F8 Ultra still lands firmly in the bang for buck zone. It undercuts many premium rivals while delivering comparable or better gaming performance, a more ambitious camera setup, and a genuinely strong media experience, so the overall value proposition remains one of its strongest arguments.

Verdict

Poco F8 Ultra feels like a confident step up from the F7 Ultra, not just a faster sequel. It combines a bold design, a huge 6.9-inch AMOLED, a genuinely impressive Bose-tuned 2.1 speaker system, and a serious camera stack built around the Light Fusion 950 main sensor and 5x periscope. Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 plus the VisionBoost D8 chip deliver top-tier gaming performance with stable high frame rates, while the 6500 mAh battery and fast wired and wireless charging keep that power usable all day.

It is not a perfect package, especially if you want the absolute best camera system, have smaller hands, or care deeply about long-term sustainability. The phone is wide, the ultrawide camera is less versatile than the rest of the system, and the software support window is only average in a segment that is rapidly improving. There is also a clear price jump over the F7 Ultra, even if the upgrades mostly justify it. If you want a compact, understated device, this is not for you, but if you want a big, expressive all-rounder that excels at games, media, and photography, the Poco F8 Ultra delivers on its premium flagship ambition.

The post Poco F8 Ultra Review: A Bold All-Rounder Balancing Gaming, Camera, and Bose-Tuned Audio first appeared on Yanko Design.

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