RedMagic isn’t subtle about who its next tablet is for. The Gaming Tablet 5 Pro, ZTE’s gaming brand’s latest hardware swing, will be unveiled in China on June 30, and the headline trick isn’t the silicon — it’s the built-in PC emulator that lets you run AAA desktop titles straight out of the box.
That emulator leans on a proprietary translation layer baked into RedMagic’s Game Space app, allowing x86 applications to run on the tablet’s ARM chipset. In a Weibo demo, RedMagic showed the layer in action, and the claims are bold for a handheld-class device: games rendering at up to 2K resolution and 144Hz. You can import your existing libraries straight from Steam or sideload games by feeding it EXE files — a workflow that sounds far more like a Windows gaming rig than a typical Android slate.
The hardware backing all this is no slouch either. RedMagic is building around the Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5, paired with a 9.06-inch OLED display running 2.4K resolution at a frankly absurd 185Hz refresh rate and peaking at 1,600 nits of brightness. That’s a panel spec sheet that wouldn’t look out of place on a flagship gaming phone, scaled up to tablet proportions.
Powering a screen that bright and fast for hours of emulated PC gaming demands a serious battery, and RedMagic obliges with an 8,500mAh cell. Charging is handled at 80W, and the tablet carries dual USB Type-C ports — handy for charging while plugging in a controller or external display without playing port roulette.
The other piece of the thermal puzzle is cooling. Sustained PC-game emulation is exactly the kind of workload that turns mobile chips into hand warmers and triggers throttling, so RedMagic is fitting the Gaming Tablet 5 Pro with liquid cooling to keep the Snapdragon running hard for longer.
What’s the catch? Emulation is rarely a free lunch. A translation layer doing real-time x86-to-ARM conversion adds overhead, and compatibility across a sprawling PC catalog is always the wildcard — a polished demo reel doesn’t guarantee your favorite title runs flawlessly. RedMagic’s pitch is essentially “buy one device, play both ecosystems,” and whether the experience holds up outside a curated showcase is the question worth watching.
For now, pre-orders are live in China, though there’s no global on-sale date yet. Final pricing hasn’t been revealed and will be confirmed during the launch event on June 30. If the emulator delivers anything close to its promises, RedMagic may have just blurred the line between gaming tablet and portable PC more than anyone expected.