Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G Leak: Dimensity 8400 and 7000mAh Battery Rumored

A new leak from tipster Sufiyan Technology suggests the Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G will feature a MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultimate SoC. The information surfaced on X today, showing a massive 7,000mAh battery, a 144Hz AMOLED display, and dedicated capacitive shoulder triggers for gaming.

The Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G Leaked Details

I cover a lot of gaming phones, but this particular spec sheet caught my eye immediately. The rumor mills are pointing to a mid-2026 launch in India for the Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G, with an expected aggressive price tag hovering around ₹30,000. When you break down the leaked numbers, you can clearly see the company is targeting hardcore mobile gamers who are tired of paying flagship prices. Let’s look at the raw data and see how it stacks up against last year’s GT 30 Pro to find the actual hardware delta.

  • Processor: MediaTek Dimensity 8400 Ultimate SoC. You are looking at a projected 24% boost in peak frame rates. I’ve tested the previous Dimensity 8350 chip, and while it was good, it sometimes struggled under sustained load. Combined with top-tier UFS 4.0 storage and LPDDR5X RAM, this new silicon is a serious step up from the GT 30 Pro, guaranteeing faster game load times and smoother multitasking.
  • Battery & Charging: A 6,500mAh to 7,000mAh cell. That is a gigantic jump from the 5,500mAh battery we saw in 2025. Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G supposedly supports 45W or 80W wired fast charging, alongside 30W wireless charging and reverse charging capabilities. Finding wireless charging in a sub-₹30,000 gaming phone is incredibly rare.
Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G specification details leak
  • Display: The Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G has 6.78-inch to 6.8-inch AMOLED panel. It retains the smooth 144Hz refresh rate and crisp 1.5K resolution (1224 x 2720 pixels) of its predecessor. High refresh rates are standard now, but maintaining that 1.5K resolution means your games will look sharp without draining the GPU.
  • Cameras: A 50MP primary sensor with Optical Image Stabilization (OIS), accompanied by an 8MP ultra-wide and a secondary sensor. This is a noticeable shift in strategy from the previous 108MP sensors, and it shows the Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G is focusing on image quality over sheer numbers.
  • Gaming Features: The series’ signature “cyber-mecha” aesthetic returns with 4 customizable RGB LED light accents on the back. Expect physical GT Trigger buttons (capacitive shoulder controls) and real liquid cooling in tubes.
  • Software: Tipped to run on Android 16 right out of the box, ensuring you get the latest features on day one.

Why do I believe this? The Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G leak aligns perfectly with the brand’s aggressive strategy in India. Infinix has been consistently pushing the limits of budget gaming over the last two years. Moving to the Dimensity 8400 Ultimate is the natural next step in their product cycle. The estimated pricing at ₹30,000 makes total sense given the premium memory upgrades to UFS 4.0.

I honestly think skipping the 108MP camera gimmick from the older models in favor of a solid 50MP sensor with real OIS is the smartest move Infinix has made in years. You don’t buy a dedicated gaming smartphone for the megapixel count. You buy it for raw performance.

The addition of actual liquid cooling tubes inside the chassis is the hardware feature I am most hyped about right now. Heat destroys battery life and ruins frame rates. If they can tame the thermal throttling with this tube system, competitors like POCO and iQOO are going to have a very hard time justifying their prices.

However, I am remaining slightly skeptical about the 7,000mAh battery claim. Fitting a battery that large into a phone that also houses liquid cooling tubes and capacitive shoulder triggers usually means a bulky, heavy device. Most companies settle for 5,500mAh to maintain ergonomics. If the Infinix GT 50 Pro 5G actually ships with that much battery power and 80W charging without feeling like a brick in your pocket, it will completely dominate the mid-range segment.

If you are currently rocking a GT 20 Pro or an older POCO device, keep your wallet closed until mid-2026. The performance delta here is substantial, especially with the leap to UFS 4.0 storage and advanced cooling. But if you already bought last year’s GT 30 Pro, you can probably skip this generation safely, unless multi-day battery life is your absolute priority.

(Via)

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Jit Bain
Show full profile Jit Bain

Jit is the resident tech enthusiast at Intaak Media. Moving away from standard reporting, Jit now focuses on Real-World Experience columns, sharing personal reactions to leaks, rumors, and daily gadget use.

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