Realme’s bringing the 15 series to Pakistan, but not all at once. The standard Realme 15 and the cheaper 15T will drop first. The Pro version? That’s coming later. Teasers could start any day now, so here’s what we know about the first two phones.
Realme 15: The Main Event
This one sits comfortably in the midrange space. MediaTek’s Dimensity 7300+ handles the processing—it’s built on a 4nm process and runs at 2.6GHz. Not flagship territory, but solid enough for most people.


You can get it with up to 12GB RAM and 512GB storage. That’s a lot of space. Photos, apps, games, whatever you want to throw at it. The RAM keeps everything running without constant reloads when you switch between apps. Ships with Android 15, and Realme’s committing to three years of OS updates. So you’re covered through Android 18, which takes you to 2027 or 2028.
That Display Though
6.8 inches of OLED goodness. The refresh rate hits 144Hz—higher than the usual 120Hz you see everywhere. Makes scrolling ridiculously smooth. Gaming feels more responsive. Even just swiping through your home screen has this premium feel to it.
Peak brightness? 6500 nits. That’s absurdly high. Your typical flagship maxes out around 2000-3000 nits. This thing will be readable under basically any lighting condition. Resolution is 1.5K, which sits between Full HD and Quad HD. At 6.8 inches, that’s plenty sharp without killing your battery.
The bezels are thin and symmetrical—no chunky borders messing up the look. HDR10+ certification means Netflix and YouTube content gets that enhanced contrast and color range. Streaming looks fantastic on this screen.


Camera Setup
Three cameras on the back. Main one’s 50MP. The megapixel count isn’t everything, but 50MP gives you flexibility—crop your photos, zoom digitally without losing too much detail, that sort of thing.
Here’s what’s interesting: the base model finally gets an 8MP ultrawide camera. Realme usually saves ultrawide for the Pro models, so seeing it here is a nice change. Ultrawide lenses let you capture way more of a scene. Great for landscapes, tight spaces, group shots where you can’t back up far enough.
Front camera matches the main camera at 50MP. Should produce sharp selfies. Video maxes out at 4K 30fps. Not 60fps, but 4K still captures way more detail than 1080p. Good enough for most people.
Built Tough
IP69 rating. That’s serious water protection. The “6” means totally dustproof. The “9” means it can handle high-pressure water jets. Rain, splashes, rinsing it under the tap—all fine. Just don’t leave it underwater for hours.
Battery’s massive: 7000mAh. Most phones pack 4500-5500mAh, so this is significantly bigger. Heavy users should get through a full day easily. Moderate users might push two days. Yeah, it’ll probably make the phone thicker and heavier, but that’s the trade-off.
80W wired charging gets you from empty to full in maybe 30-40 minutes. The large battery means it takes a bit longer than smaller ones at the same wattage, but 80W is still plenty fast.
The Rest
Fingerprint sensor lives under the display, uses optical tech. It’s not as fast as the ultrasonic sensors in premium phones, but it works fine for everyday unlocking.
Stereo speakers create a wider soundstage than single speakers. Watching videos or playing games without headphones sounds noticeably better.
WiFi 6 support. Faster speeds, better performance in crowded networks. If your router supports WiFi 6, you’ll see the benefits.
Realme 15T: Budget Option
The 15T costs less, but you’re making some sacrifices. It keeps the 7000mAh battery and IP69 rating—that’s good. Everything else? Compromises.


Smaller Screen, Lower Specs
6.57 inches with an AMOLED panel. Resolution’s 1080p, which is still sharp at this size. Refresh rate drops to 120Hz from 144Hz. Most people won’t notice that 24Hz difference in regular use.
No HDR10+ certification, though. Streaming content won’t look quite as good. Typical brightness is 1400 nits, peaking at 4000 nits in certain scenarios. That’s still excellent for outdoor use, just not as extreme as the standard model.
Slower Chip
Dimensity 6400 Max running at 2.5GHz. Lower-midrange territory. You’ll feel the difference in heavy games or serious multitasking. But texting, social media, web browsing, casual gaming? Handles it without problems.
Still gets Android 15 with three years of updates. Same support window as the more expensive model.
Camera Cuts
No ultrawide lens here. You get a 50MP main camera and a basically useless 2MP depth sensor. The depth sensor only exists to help with portrait mode blur effects—it doesn’t take real photos.
Front camera stays at 50MP, matching the others. Video drops to 1080p 60fps. You lose 4K, but 1080p at 60fps still produces smooth footage for social media.
What Else Changes
Single speaker instead of stereo. Audio quality takes a hit—less immersive, flatter sound.
WiFi 5 instead of WiFi 6. Still gets you decent wireless speeds, just not as fast or efficient in busy environments.


Charging slows to 60W despite having the same 7000mAh battery. You’re looking at 45-60 minutes for a full charge. That’s about 15-20 minutes longer than the standard model. Not terrible, just slower.
Fingerprint sensor’s still optical, still under the display.
What Makes Sense?
Launching the standard 15 and budget 15T first lets Realme test the market before bringing out the Pro. Smart move.
Standard Realme 15 gives you the better display, ultrawide camera, faster chip, and 80W charging. Costs more, but you’re getting meaningful upgrades.


The 15T makes sense if you’re on a tighter budget but still want that huge battery and water resistance. You’re sacrificing display size, camera flexibility, and some performance—but you’re saving money.
The Pro will presumably slot above both with even better specs. Faster processor, maybe? Better cameras? We’ll find out when Realme announces it.
Teasers should drop soon with pricing and exact launch dates for Pakistan.















