Red Magic 11 Pro+ Shows Liquid Cooling in Action On Back of the Phone

For years, gaming phones have flaunted aggressive styling and RGB accents, yet hidden their true marvels — the intricate thermal systems that keep them cool under pressure. The REDMAGIC 11 Pro+ flips that narrative, turning the unseen into the unforgettable. This is the first smartphone to make its liquid-cooling loop visible — transforming pure engineering into an aesthetic experience.

The back panel features a transparent window that exposes the phone’s active coolant channel, snaking in luminous blue through the chassis. The effect is hypnotic: as you game, liquid visibly circulates, glowing under customizable RGB light. It’s more than just spectacle — it’s a live demonstration of thermal physics in motion, a celebration of function as form.

The bold ring design, encircled by a halo of light echoes the dynamic energy of turbines and PC water blocks. It establishes a visual identity that feels mechanical, alive, and transparent — a phone that wears its performance on its sleeve.

Beyond the aesthetic statement lies serious thermal innovation. REDMAGIC’s dual liquid-and-air cooling architecture is designed for endurance, blending conduction, convection, and circulation to prevent throttling even under extreme gaming loads. The transparent coolant chamber isn’t just a gimmick — it’s a fully functional pipeline integrated with vapor chambers and micro-channels that dynamically dissipate heat away from the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 processor.

Specs match the design’s ambition: up to 24GB of LPDDR5T RAM, 1TB UFS 4.1 PRO storage, and an 8,000 mAh battery ensure marathon sessions without compromise. The BOE X10-based “Full-Screen 2.0” display delivers 2K visuals at 144Hz, powered by the Ultra Graphics Engine 3.0 and the RedCore R4 chip, upscaling over 200 games to console-grade clarity and fluidity.

via Yanko Design

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Passionate about design, especially smartphones, gadgets and tablets. Blogging on this site since 2008 and discovering prototypes and trends before bigshot companies sometimes