RedMagic 11 Air goes on sale Feb 11 — early reviews weigh the €499, 207g fan‑cooled gaming phone

RedMagic 11 Air goes on sale Feb 11 — early reviews weigh the €499, 207g fan‑cooled gaming phone

February 1, 2026

WARSAW, 1 February 2026, 13:19 CET

  • Europe’s open sale kicks off on Feb. 11, with €1 “Early Bird” vouchers rolling out Feb. 5, offering €30 off and early access
  • The specs show a 7.85 mm thick, 207g device powered by a Snapdragon 8 Elite chip, featuring a 24,000‑RPM fan and packing a 7,000 mAh battery
  • Hands-on reviews highlight strong performance for the price but point out issues like heat buildup, loud fans, and the absence of features like wireless charging

REDMAGIC is set to launch sales of its RedMagic 11 Air gaming phone across Europe on Feb. 11, with prices starting at 499 euros. From Feb. 5, the company is offering €1 “Early Bird” vouchers that grant early access and unlock special discounts. REDMAGIC

Gaming phones are known for packing serious power, but they’re also bulky and heavy — think oversized screens, flashy lighting, extra cooling vents, and sometimes shoulder triggers that mimic a handheld console. They appeal to a niche audience, yet their size makes them cumbersome and easy to overlook.

That’s crucial in a time when “Air” means slimmer devices, and performance improvements often hit a wall due to heat rather than raw chip speed. A gaming phone that sheds its bulky look but keeps up the pace under pressure could challenge a big slice of the mainstream Android crowd.

RedMagic’s European spec sheet shows the 11 Air measures 7.85 mm thick and weighs 207 grams. It features a 6.8-inch OLED display capable of refreshing up to 144Hz — that’s how many times the screen updates every second. Inside, it runs on Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite chip and packs a 24,000-RPM fan. The battery is a hefty 7,000 mAh, with charging speeds reaching 80W. You also get IP54 dust and splash resistance and dual cameras: a 50-megapixel main shooter and an 8-megapixel ultra-wide.

Tom’s Guide’s Richard Priday got hands-on with the device and noted it starts at $529 in the US and £439 in the UK, pricing it close to Google’s Pixel 9a and below higher-end flagships he compared it to. Benchmark results—Geekbench 6 for CPU and 3DMark Wild Life for graphics—show the 11 Air performing close to the more expensive 11 Pro. Still, Priday cautioned that extended gaming sessions cause noticeable heat on the back panel.

On Jan. 31, Yanko Design published a review where JC Torres described the design as “the slimmest, lightest package the brand has made yet.” He highlighted the 7,000 mAh battery and the affordable price but noted some compromises: no wireless charging, an “8MP ultra-wide camera” he called “mediocre,” and only “basic” IP54 resistance. Yanko Design

The “Air” pitch is essentially a gaming phone masquerading as an everyday device. It uses active cooling and a vapor chamber—a heat spreader that shifts heat away from the chip—to maintain steady frame rates. But those vents and fans come at the cost of water resistance and quiet operation.

On Jan. 30, Forbes highlighted the RedMagic 11 Air in a wider roundup of Android news by Ewan Spence, as companies gear up for a fresh batch of premium launches and leaks.

Early reports also highlight the familiar drawbacks: the fan kicks in, the phone heats up during extended use, and the feature set is pared down in key areas where top-tier flagships usually shine. If users see the camera and charging cuts as deal-breakers—or if the “Air” label raises hopes the phone can’t fulfill—the 11 Air could end up caught between hardcore gamers craving the full-powered version and regular users who prefer a standard handset.

RedMagic is banking on timing and price to make an impact: vouchers drop Feb. 5, early access kicks off Feb. 10, and the full European launch happens Feb. 11 at 13:00 CET. The real question now: can lighter gaming gear break out of its niche without giving up what makes it special?

iPhone 16 Pro Max vs Redmagic 10 Pro Plus vs S25 Ultra vs Vivo X200 Ultra - GAMING Test ☠️, #shorts
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Mateusz Ługowik

Mateusz Ługowik is a senior markets reporter at Bez-kabli.pl, specializing in technology stocks, artificial intelligence and global financial markets. A graduate of the University of Gdańsk, he previously worked in investment research and market analysis. His coverage helps readers understand the key trends, companies and innovations influencing investors worldwide.

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