Display

The Pro 6 Plus is equipped with a height-stop brandish for a 2022 flagship device: a five.7-inch AMOLED with a resolution of 2560 x 1440. With a pixel density of 518 PPI, this display is extremely crisp and delivers a fantastic viewing experience filled with details. Its specifications are essentially identical to the Galaxy Notation 5's brandish, although information technology'southward unclear whether Meizu has used the same Samsung panel in their handset.

All of the benefits of an AMOLED display are on show here, including deep blackness levels and fantastic viewing angles. Meizu lists a contrast ratio of x,000:1, although considering the Pro 6 Plus' brandish switches off its pixels to display blacks, the actual contrast ratio is closer to infinite. In my testing, I recorded a very small corporeality of calorie-free output from a fully black display, resulting in a contrast ratio over 200,000:1.

Brightness levels from AMOLEDs can be of some concern at times, nevertheless the Pro six Plus' AMOLED is ane of the brighter panels I've seen. Meizu lists a typical brightness level of 430 nits, and in my testing I accomplished 415 nits, which is pretty close. The Pro 6 Plus outperforms the Pixel Forty here, and matches the OnePlus 3, although information technology falls backside Samsung's contempo flagships with their brightness boost feature. Meizu does list a peak brightness of 600 nits on their product page besides, although I suspect they could be referring to peak brightness at a lower APL.

In general, the Pro half-dozen Plus is visible outdoors with strong overhead sunlight, although the white bezel on my review unit does reverberate a lot more light than the screen itself can output, oftentimes giving the display a dark appearance.

As for color operation, Meizu states the Pro 6 Plus covers 103% of the NTSC color gamut; a argument which I'm going to ignore equally NTSC is an irrelevant and outdated gamut. In my testing against the simply gamut that Android supports, sRGB, this AMOLED achieved 143.9% coverage. In other words, the screen exceeds the sRGB gamut and oversaturates most colors to deliver vibrant imagery that 'pops'.

Considering this display covers 96.8% of the Adobe RGB spectrum, information technology's disappointing that Android doesn't back up proper color management to make better utilize of this wide-gamut display. Without color management, everything looks oversaturated and slightly unnatural on the Pro 6 Plus, which goes against Meizu'southward statement of a screen that is "is exactly what you lot see with your eyes". Virtually people won't complain about the vibrancy of this panel, although it's not suited to artistic professionals.

There is no setting I could find to enable an 'sRGB mode' for this brandish, however there is a color temperature slider that tin adjust this display to a near-perfect tone. This improves greyscale functioning, and slightly improves general color performance, but not to an extent that addresses the oversaturation.

Meizu has also included their ain version of 3D Bear upon applied science in the Pro 6 Plus' display, which they're calling 3D Press. Unsurprisingly this characteristic has essentially no support outside of a handful of Meizu's first party applications, and even these first party integrations are largely gimmicks. Like on the iPhone, information technology's a bully feature that's unnecessary for everyday telephone usage.