Key Takeaways

- RedMagic Gaming Tablet 5 Pro launches June 30 in China with visible water cooling system
- Expected specs include Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset and 9-inch OLED display with 185Hz refresh rate
- Global version likely to be called RedMagic Astra 2, following the rebranding pattern of its predecessor
RedMagic will unveil its Gaming Tablet 5 Pro on June 30 in China, confirming a launch date the company first teased in May. The tablet features a visible water cooling system on its back panel, a first for the brand's tablet lineup and a notable escalation in the mobile gaming thermal management arms race.
The device succeeds the RedMagic Gaming Tablet 3 Pro, which was rebranded as the RedMagic Astra for international markets. That naming pattern suggests the new tablet will likely arrive globally as the RedMagic Astra 2, though the company has not confirmed international availability or timing.
What do we know about the specs?
RedMagic has released official images showing the tablet in two color options. The water cooling pipes are clearly visible running across the back panel. The company claims the device is "incredibly comfortable to hold," though hands-on impressions will have to wait until the launch event.
Rumors point to Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset powering the tablet. This would be the top-tier mobile processor built on 3nm architecture, putting the Gaming Tablet 5 Pro in direct competition with flagship phones rather than typical tablet silicon. The display is reportedly a 9-inch OLED panel with a 185Hz refresh rate, a bump from the 165Hz panel on its predecessor.
Neither the battery capacity nor pricing has been disclosed. The previous generation packed a 10,100 mAh battery, so a similar or larger cell seems reasonable for a device built around sustained gaming sessions.
Why water cooling in a tablet?
Mobile chips throttle performance when they overheat. In gaming scenarios, that throttling kicks in precisely when you need consistent frame rates most. Active cooling solutions, whether fans or liquid cooling loops, can reduce temperatures by 3 to 5 degrees Celsius during sustained loads. That delta translates to steadier performance over longer play sessions.
RedMagic has been pushing active cooling in its smartphones for years, including built-in fans in devices like the RedMagic 9 Pro. Moving that expertise to a larger tablet form factor makes thermal sense. Tablets have more surface area to dissipate heat, and the larger chassis provides room for more elaborate cooling hardware.
The visible cooling pipes are a design choice as much as a functional one. Gaming hardware has long leaned into the aesthetic of exposed components and RGB lighting. Making the cooling system visible signals performance intent to the target audience.
Where does this fit in the gaming tablet market?
The gaming tablet segment remains niche but growing. The global market hit approximately $2.8 billion in 2023, with projections showing continued expansion through 2028. Competitors include the Lenovo Legion Tab and ASUS ROG gaming tablets, both of which target the same audience of mobile gamers who want a larger display without sacrificing performance.
RedMagic, as a sub-brand of Nubia (itself owned by ZTE), has carved out a position by consistently topping AnTuTu benchmark charts with its gaming smartphones. The brand's approach is straightforward: aggressive specs, active cooling, and gamer aesthetics. The Gaming Tablet 5 Pro appears to continue that formula.
One gap in the current spec sheet: there is no mention of cellular connectivity. Several commenters have noted the irony that budget $100 tablets often include LTE or 5G support while premium gaming tablets sometimes ship Wi-Fi only. RedMagic has not addressed this yet.
What about global availability?
The June 30 launch is for the Chinese market specifically. RedMagic typically follows China launches with global releases a few weeks to a few months later. Given that the predecessor was rebranded as the Astra for international sales, the same pattern seems likely here.
Pricing will be the key variable. Gaming tablets occupy an awkward price bracket. They cost more than mainstream tablets but less than gaming laptops, competing against both while offering compromises compared to each. The previous Astra launched around $500 to $600 depending on configuration. Expect similar or slightly higher pricing for the upgraded model.
Frequently Asked Questions
When does the RedMagic Gaming Tablet 5 Pro launch?
The tablet will be officially unveiled on June 30, 2025, in China. Global availability has not been announced but typically follows a few weeks to months later.
What chipset will the RedMagic Gaming Tablet 5 Pro use?
Rumors indicate it will use the Snapdragon 8 Elite chipset, Qualcomm's most powerful mobile processor built on 3nm architecture.
Does the RedMagic Gaming Tablet 5 Pro have water cooling?
Yes. Official images show visible water cooling pipes on the back of the device. RedMagic has confirmed water cooling as a feature.
What is the display size and refresh rate?
The tablet reportedly features a 9-inch OLED display with a 185Hz refresh rate, according to rumors.
Will the tablet be called something different internationally?
Likely yes. The predecessor was rebranded as the RedMagic Astra for global markets, suggesting this model may launch internationally as the RedMagic Astra 2.
Logicity's Take
Water cooling in a tablet is more engineering statement than necessity for most users, but it signals RedMagic's positioning clearly: this is for people who treat mobile gaming as seriously as PC gaming. The real question is whether the company can deliver on the thermal promises without making the device too thick or heavy. The visible cooling pipes are clever marketing. They turn a functional component into a visual feature that justifies a price premium.
Another major mobile hardware launch coming this summer
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Source: GSMArena.com / Vlad
Manaal Khan
Tech & Innovation Writer
Produced with AI assistance and reviewed by the Logicity editorial team. Learn more in our Editorial Policy.
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