Table of Contents
Open Table of Contents
- Overview
- Quick Picks
- Real Gaming Frame Rates by Phone
- 1. Infinix GT 30 Pro — The One Built for Gamers
- 2. Infinix Note 60 Pro — Strong Gaming, Even Stronger All-Round Value
- 3. Infinix GT 30 — Mid-Budget, Still a Real Gaming Phone
- 4. Infinix Hot 60 Pro — For Casual Gaming on a Budget
- GT 30 Pro vs Note 60 Pro — Side by Side
- Final Verdict
- Things Worth Knowing Before You Buy
- FAQ
- Sources
Overview
Playing Mobile Legends ranked on a phone that throttles mid-teamfight is one of the most frustrating things in mobile gaming. You’re not bad — your phone is just behind. In 2026, Infinix has more genuinely capable gaming options than they’ve ever had across real price ranges. This guide cuts through the noise and tells you what each phone actually delivers in-game, not just on paper.
TL;DR: The GT 30 Pro is the best Infinix gaming phone for competitive players. The Note 60 Pro offers the best overall value. The GT 30 is the best mid-range gaming choice. The Hot 60 Pro is the best budget option.
Before we go deep: specifications were verified against official Infinix materials and major review databases including GSMArena. Performance figures are based on independent reviewer testing and may vary by software version, ambient temperature, and game updates. Nigerian prices are estimates from mid-2026 market listings and will shift with the exchange rate.
Quick Picks
| Phone | Best For | Chipset | Display | Approx. Price (₦) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GT 30 Pro | Competitive/serious gamers | Dimensity 8350 Ultimate | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz | ₦420k–₦530k |
| Note 60 Pro | All-rounder with strong gaming | Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz | ₦345k–₦470k |
| GT 30 | Mid-budget gaming | Dimensity 7400 | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz | ₦320k–₦380k |
| Hot 60 Pro | Budget / casual play | Helio G200 | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz | ₦270k–₦375k |
Price note: Naira prices shift with the exchange rate. Figures above are ballpark ranges sourced from Jumia, Slot, and Jiji as of mid-2026. Always confirm before buying.
Real Gaming Frame Rates by Phone
Frame rate claims mean nothing without context. This table reflects what third-party reviewers and official certifications confirm — not what the marketing sheet says.
| Game | GT 30 Pro | Note 60 Pro | GT 30 | Hot 60 Pro |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mobile Legends (MLBB) | Up to 120 FPS (MPL certified) | Up to 120 FPS | 115–119 FPS consistent (HFR certified) | 60 FPS |
| COD Mobile | Up to 120 FPS | 120 FPS (Activision certified¹) | Up to 60 FPS | 60 FPS |
| PUBG Mobile | 100–120 FPS (Smooth settings) | 90 FPS avg. (Smooth + Extreme) | Smooth to 90 FPS | 60 FPS |
| Genshin Impact | 50+ FPS on high settings | 60 FPS; drops at max settings | Mostly smooth on medium-low | Not recommended for long sessions |
| Honor of Kings | 120 FPS consistent | 120 FPS consistent | 120 FPS | 60 FPS |
¹ Activision certification confirmed by Infinix’s official India launch press release and 91Mobiles pre-launch report. Note: real-world COD Mobile average FPS on the Note 60 Pro recorded at ~57 FPS by 91Mobiles during their independent test — certification does not guarantee consistent 120 FPS in all conditions.
Sources: REVU Philippines (GT 30 Pro first impressions), GizGuide (GT 30 review), Beebom (Note 60 Pro review), 91Mobiles (Note 60 Pro review), GSMArena (Hot 60 Pro+ review). Results vary by network, room temperature, and game version.
1. Infinix GT 30 Pro — The One Built for Gamers

The GT 30 Pro is the most honest gaming phone in Infinix’s current lineup. It was named the official tournament phone for MPL Philippines Season 16 — Mobile Legends’ most prestigious regional league — after going through testing at both Infinix and MOONTON’s headquarters in Shanghai, then validation in live broadcast environments and professional scrims. That context matters. A phone that pro MLBB players trust in tournament conditions is a safe bet for your ranked grind.
The chipset is the MediaTek Dimensity 8350 Ultimate (4nm, Mali-G615 MC6 GPU), paired with up to 12GB LPDDR5X RAM and up to 512GB UFS 4.0 storage. UFS 4.0 is a meaningful upgrade over the UFS 2.2 in competing phones at this price — faster asset loading in open maps and shorter game boot times are the practical benefits.
The 6.78-inch AMOLED display runs at 144Hz, 1224×2720 resolution, and 4500 nits peak brightness, with Gorilla Glass 7i protection. It’s one of the best gaming panels available below ₦600,000.
The GT Shoulder Triggers — capacitive pressure-sensitive buttons on the sides of the frame rated at 520Hz touch response — are the hardware feature that separates this from every other phone in this guide. Map them to aim and fire in PUBG or recall and ultimate in MLBB, and the control advantage over a touchscreen-only player is real. MPL pros confirmed as much. One AURORA Gaming player noted zero lag and seamless recall mapping during the MPL Season 16 validation.
Thermal management runs through a 3D Vapor Cloud Chamber cooling system. During testing, surface temperatures peaked around 42–46°C after an hour of BGMI at max settings — warm but not alarming. Bypass charging mode is the more useful feature for Nigerian gamers specifically: it draws power directly from the adapter so the battery isn’t cycling charge and heat simultaneously during long plugged-in sessions. With NEPA’s irregular supply, most people play while charging.
What it doesn’t do well: Night photography is the main weakness — the 108MP sensor is fine outdoors but soft in low light. Charging is 45W wired, which means longer top-up times than the Note 60 Pro’s 90W. If you game while plugged in anyway, the slower charging speed matters less.
Confirmed specs (GSMArena): Dimensity 8350 Ultimate (4nm), 8GB or 12GB LPDDR5X, 256GB or 512GB UFS 4.0, 5200mAh or 5500mAh battery depending on regional variant (the 12GB/256GB unit sold by Infinix Nigeria is confirmed at 5500mAh; some parallel-import stock may carry a 5200mAh cell — check the box label before buying), 45W wired + 30W wireless + bypass charging, IP64, Android 15 / XOS 15, up to 2 major Android updates + 3 years security patches.
Approx. Nigeria price: ₦420,000–₦530,000
2. Infinix Note 60 Pro — Strong Gaming, Even Stronger All-Round Value

The Note 60 Pro made history as the first Infinix smartphone ever powered by a Qualcomm Snapdragon chipset. That’s not a marketing line — Infinix explicitly confirmed it in their launch announcement, and it signals a genuine performance leap over the MediaTek Helio G-series chips that dominated previous Note models.
The Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 (4nm, Adreno 810 GPU) delivers an AnTuTu V11 score above 1.1 million — strong for the mid-range tier. The chip comes with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon Elite Gaming features including Adaptive Performance Engine 3.0, which handles real-time resource allocation during demanding sequences. Activision has officially certified the Note 60 Pro for 120 FPS COD Mobile gameplay. The important caveat: 91Mobiles’ independent test recorded a real-world average closer to 57 FPS in COD. Certification tells you the hardware is capable — actual output depends on settings, server conditions, and network stability.
What the Note 60 Pro clearly wins: thermals and battery. The 4,758mm² 3D IceCore Vapor Chamber with crystal graphite kept the phone at temperatures reviewers described as “no noticeable heating” through extended COD Mobile sessions at the Beebom review unit. The 6500mAh battery with 90W wired charging reaches 50% in 16 minutes and 100% in 41 minutes — that’s significantly faster than the GT 30 Pro’s 45W setup. For a Nigerian gamer grabbing a quick recharge between matches, the difference is easily 20–25 minutes of extra battery per charge cycle. Bypass charging is also supported.
The phone ships on Android 16 / XOS 16, which puts it one generation ahead of the GT 30 Pro’s Android 15 launch. Infinix has committed to 3 major Android updates (confirmed by GSMArena specs and the official update policy) — one more than the GT series gets. If you keep phones for 3+ years, that extra year of OS support has real value for app compatibility and security.
The Active Matrix Display on the rear camera island — 288 individual LEDs showing notifications, pixel pets, and charging status — is a novel feature, not a gaming feature. It will not move your MLBB rank.
Where it falls short: No physical shoulder triggers. IP64 is basic splash protection — competing phones at this price now offer IP68. Some reviewers noted it bears a very close resemblance to the iPhone 17 Pro’s camera island layout, which you may or may not care about.
Confirmed specs (GSMArena full review): Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 (4nm), 8GB or 12GB LPDDR5, 128GB or 256GB UFS 2.2, 6500mAh battery, 90W wired + 30W wireless + bypass charging, IP64, Android 16 / XOS 16, up to 3 major Android updates + 5 years security patches.
Approx. Nigeria price: ₦345,000–₦470,000 — confirm stock is genuine and sealed, as this is a newer 2026 launch with inconsistent market availability
3. Infinix GT 30 — Mid-Budget, Still a Real Gaming Phone

The GT 30 keeps the core identity of the Pro at a lower price: same 6.78-inch 144Hz AMOLED panel, same GT Shoulder Trigger system, same IP64 rating, same RGB LED customization on the back. What changes is the chipset — MediaTek Dimensity 7400 (4nm, Mali-G615 MC2 GPU) — which is a meaningful step down from the 8350 Ultimate but still handles the most popular mobile titles well.
In real testing by GizGuide using their review unit, MLBB ran at a consistent 115–119 FPS at max settings, even during intense multi-player clashes. PUBG Mobile and Standoff 2 held up smoothly over extended sessions. Genshin Impact was playable at medium-low settings without significant lag — a better result than many phones in this tier. The GT 30 is officially HFR-certified for 10 games including MLBB, PUBG Mobile, COD Mobile, Free Fire, Honor of Kings, and Delta Force.
Geekbench 6 scores from independent testing: Single-core 1061, Multi-core 3185 — solid for a phone in the ₦320k–₦380k range.
RAM is fixed at 8GB LPDDR5X with no 12GB option, and there is no microSD expansion — the 256GB base is what you get. Battery and charging (5500mAh, 45W) match the GT 30 Pro. It ships on Android 15 / XOS 15 with the same 2 major update promise as the Pro.
If the GT 30 Pro is out of budget and gaming is your main priority, this is the pick. The shoulder triggers alone put it in a different category from standard phones at this price.
Confirmed specs (GSMArena + official Infinix spec page): Dimensity 7400 (4nm), 8GB LPDDR5X, 256GB storage (no expansion), 5500mAh battery, 45W wired + 10W reverse wired + bypass charging, IP64, Android 15 / XOS 15, up to 2 major Android updates + 3 years security patches.
Approx. Nigeria price: ₦320,000–₦380,000
4. Infinix Hot 60 Pro — For Casual Gaming on a Budget
The Hot 60 Pro covers everyday gaming without drama. The Helio G200 (6nm, Mali-G57 MC2) is a capable chip for titles that aren’t frame-rate-hungry — MLBB on standard settings, Clash of Clans, Subway Surfers, and similar games run without the phone heating up noticeably.
GSMArena’s full review of the Hot 60 Pro+ (which shares the same Helio G200) confirmed the phone “holds up well under extended stress testing” and “the device’s surface remains cool — at most, it feels mildly warm but always comfortable.” For casual gaming, that thermal composure is genuinely useful, and it’s a better outcome than some more expensive phones that throttle aggressively.
The display is now a 6.78-inch AMOLED at 144Hz — no longer the IPS LCD that earlier Hot models carried. That’s a visible improvement in screen quality for gaming; darker scenes show more detail, colours are richer, and fast-moving frames look cleaner.
What it cannot do: No shoulder triggers. No high frame rate certification. COD Mobile and PUBG are limited to 60 FPS. For ranked competitive play where frame consistency over long sessions matters, this phone will start to show limitations. For daily casual gaming, it’s comfortable and won’t embarrass itself.
Confirmed specs (GSMArena): Helio G200 (6nm), 8GB RAM, 128GB or 256GB storage, 5160mAh battery, 45W wired charging, IP65, Android 15 / XOS 15.
Approx. Nigeria price: ₦270,000–₦375,000
GT 30 Pro vs Note 60 Pro — Side by Side
| Feature | GT 30 Pro | Note 60 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Chipset | Dimensity 8350 Ultimate (4nm) | Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 (4nm) |
| GPU | Mali-G615 MC6 | Adreno 810 |
| RAM | 8GB / 12GB LPDDR5X | 8GB / 12GB LPDDR5 |
| Storage | 256GB / 512GB UFS 4.0 | 128GB / 256GB UFS 2.2 |
| Physical Triggers | Yes — 520Hz capacitive | No |
| Battery | 5500mAh | 6500mAh |
| Wired Charging | 45W | 90W |
| Wireless Charging | 30W | 30W |
| Bypass Charging | Yes | Yes |
| Display | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz 4500nits | 6.78” AMOLED 144Hz 4500nits |
| OS (Launch) | Android 15 | Android 16 |
| OS Updates | 2 major + 3yr patches | 3 major + 5yr patches |
| IP Rating | IP64 | IP64 |
| MPL Tournament Certified | Yes (Season 16) | No |
| COD Activision Certified | Not specified | Yes |
| Approx. Nigeria Price | ₦420k–₦530k | ₦345k–₦470k |
Final Verdict
After going through the confirmed specs, independent test data, and real-world frame rate results for every phone in this guide, the choices are actually clearer than they first appear.
🏆 Best Overall for Competitive Gaming: Infinix GT 30 Pro
No other Infinix phone combines physical shoulder triggers, MPL tournament certification, UFS 4.0 storage, a 144Hz AMOLED panel, and bypass charging in one package at this price. If you play MLBB, PUBG, or COD Mobile seriously — this is the one. The only honest reason not to buy it over the Note 60 Pro is if you need a phone that works equally hard for everything else in your life, not just gaming.
🥈 Best Value (Gaming + Everything Else): Infinix Note 60 Pro
The first Infinix phone with a Qualcomm chipset is also the better all-day phone. Bigger battery, faster charging, longer software support, and better sustained thermals in test conditions. It handles gaming well — just without the hardware trigger advantage. At ₦345k–₦470k depending on config, it undercuts the GT 30 Pro while offering more in daily use. For most people who play casually-to-seriously but also need their phone for work and life, this is the smarter long-term buy.
🥉 Best Mid-Budget Pick: Infinix GT 30
Keeps the shoulder triggers, keeps the 144Hz AMOLED, and officially runs MLBB at 115+ FPS. Loses the high-end chipset and 12GB RAM option. For players who want the gaming-phone experience without paying GT 30 Pro prices, the GT 30 is the honest mid-budget answer.
💰 Best Budget Pick: Infinix Hot 60 Pro
Casual gamers who play on standard settings and aren’t chasing frame rates won’t feel like they’re missing much here. The AMOLED display is a genuine upgrade over previous Hot models. Just don’t expect ranked MLBB at 120 FPS — it’s not what this phone is for.
Things Worth Knowing Before You Buy
Check that the box is sealed. The Note 60 Pro is a 2026 launch and has attracted some questionable listings on secondary markets. Slot, Jumia, and Konga are the safest options for authenticity. On Jiji, inspect the original seal in person before paying.
Use only the bundled charger. Fast-charging protocols above 45W communicate between chip and adapter. A mismatched third-party charger will charge slower and in some cases cause heat issues over time.
Game on Wi-Fi for ranked modes. Mobile data latency in Nigeria varies too much by location and time of day for stable MLBB or COD ranked play. Even a basic router connection will give you more stable ping than mobile data in most parts of Lagos or Abuja.
Bypass charging is more relevant in Nigeria than it sounds. With irregular power supply, most Nigerian gamers charge while playing. Bypass mode prevents the battery from absorbing charge and heat at the same time during long plugged-in sessions — all four phones here support it except the Hot 60 Pro.
Also on ReviByte: Infinix Note 60 Pro vs Hot 60 Pro vs Tecno Spark 40 Pro · Infinix Hot 70 Review · Why Phones Under $400 Are Better Than Ever in 2026 · Best Tecno Phone for Battery Life · Best Google Pixel for Battery Life

FAQ
Which Infinix phone is best for Mobile Legends in Nigeria?
The GT 30 Pro is the definitive answer. It’s officially certified for 120 FPS MLBB gameplay, was chosen as the official tournament phone for MPL Season 16 — the Philippines’ top professional MLBB league — and the shoulder triggers give you a real hardware control advantage. If budget is tight, the GT 30 (standard) is also HFR-certified and runs MLBB at 115–119 FPS consistently.
Is the Note 60 Pro really the first Infinix phone with Qualcomm?
Yes — confirmed by Infinix’s official press release (CEO Tony Zhao’s statement at the partnership announcement with Qualcomm), 91Mobiles’ pre-launch chipset report, and GSMArena’s full spec listing. Infinix had used Snapdragon chips in some tablets previously, but the Note 60 Pro is confirmed as their first smartphone with a Qualcomm chipset.
The Note 60 Pro says 120 FPS COD Mobile certified — why did 91Mobiles only record ~57 FPS?
The Activision certification means the hardware is officially capable of 120 FPS in COD Mobile under optimal conditions. Real-world averages depend on graphics settings, server load, and network conditions. 91Mobiles’ test environment produced ~57 FPS average. Honor of Kings, by contrast, consistently hit 120 FPS on the same phone. Certification is not a performance guarantee — it’s a hardware capability declaration.
GT 30 Pro or Note 60 Pro — which should I actually buy?
For gaming as your main use case: GT 30 Pro. The shoulder triggers, storage speed, and MPL tournament pedigree tip it firmly in that direction. For a phone that plays well enough for serious gaming but also serves you well for work, banking, and daily life over the next three years: Note 60 Pro. The extra battery capacity, faster charging, and longer software support make it the better long-term value for mixed use.
Does the GT 30 Pro overheat during long sessions?
It gets warm. Reviewers recorded surface temperatures of 42–46°C during hour-long BGMI sessions at max settings — within normal range for a gaming phone, not dangerous, but noticeable. The bypass charging mode and the optional MagCharge Cooler accessory both help manage heat during extended play.
Is the Hot 60 Pro good enough for PUBG Mobile?
For casual 60 FPS play, yes. The Helio G200 handles it without significant heating. For competitive ranked PUBG where 90+ FPS stability matters, this phone will show limitations over long sessions. Know your play level before deciding.
Where is the safest place to buy these phones in Nigeria?
Slot.ng, Jumia, and Konga for new units with warranty. Avoid unverified sellers on social media or WhatsApp, especially for newer launches like the Note 60 Pro where fake or grey-market units have appeared. If buying on Jiji, inspect the seal and full box contents in person.
Which Infinix gaming phone has the best battery life?
Note 60 Pro. The 6500mAh cell with 90W charging (full charge in 41 minutes) beats the GT 30 Pro’s 5500mAh with 45W. For long gaming sessions with limited charging breaks, the Note 60 Pro has noticeably more runway. Both support bypass charging.
Sources
- GSMArena — Infinix GT 30 Pro full specs
- GSMArena — Infinix Note 60 Pro full specs & review
- GSMArena — Infinix GT 30 full specs
- GSMArena — Infinix Hot 60 Pro+ full review
- REVU Philippines — Infinix GT 30 Pro first impressions
- GizGuide — Infinix GT 30 Pro full review
- GizGuide — Infinix GT 30 review
- Beebom — Infinix Note 60 Pro review
- 91Mobiles — Infinix Note 60 Pro gaming test & review
- 91Mobiles — Infinix Note 60 Pro Snapdragon 7s Gen 4 chipset details
- GizmoChina — Infinix Note 60 Pro key specs confirmed
- Infinix official Nigeria X post — GT 30 Pro 12GB pricing
- Infinix official — Note 60 Pro Nigeria product page
- Official Infinix GT 30 Pro global spec page
- Official Infinix GT 30 global spec page
- InfinixMob — Infinix software update policy


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