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凤凰科技 2026-03-26

Vlogger "Xiaohai-ge" bursts into tears after receiving the Redmi (红米) Turbo 5 Max — claims it feels smoother than Apple's devices

Emotional unboxing goes viral

A popular vlogger known as "Xiaohai-ge" reportedly broke down in tears during an unboxing and first‑look clip after receiving the Redmi (红米) Turbo 5 Max, calling the handset "smoother and more fluid than Apple's devices." The short video, which it has been reported circulated widely on Chinese social platforms, shows an emotional reaction as the creator demonstrates the phone's animations and app switching — and directly compares the feel to Apple (苹果) products.

What the claim means — and what it doesn't

The Turbo 5 Max is a flagship from Xiaomi (小米)'s Redmi sub‑brand, designed to compete on performance and value rather than premium pricing. Smartphone fluidity is partly a hardware story — high refresh rates and fast chips — and partly software tuning. It has been reported that Xiaomi has pushed aggressive UI optimizations and high frame‑rate support for the Turbo 5 Max, which may explain the subjective "smoother" impression. Subjective viral clips are not rigorous benchmarks, however; real‑world performance varies by app, settings and user habits.

Bigger picture: competition amid geopolitics

Why does this matter beyond a single tearful video? Chinese smartphone makers — including Xiaomi, OPPO and vivo — have been closing perceived gaps with Western rivals on hardware and user experience even as U.S. export controls and broader tech tensions reshape supply chains. Those geopolitical pressures have accelerated local engineering and software innovation. A viral praise of perceived superiority over Apple feeds domestic pride and helps positioning in both domestic and export markets.

Will feelings convert to market share?

Emotional moments make for shareable clips, but will they shift global market dynamics? It remains to be seen whether such videos translate into sustained sales or simply spur short‑term buzz. For Western readers unfamiliar with China's tech scene: online endorsements and consumer fervor can drive rapid reputational gains here — and in a market where design, price and perceived smoothness all matter, a single viral moment can be noteworthy.

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