Doogee Note 59 Pro
Realme 14 5G 256GB

Doogee Note 59 Pro Realme 14 5G 256GB

Overview

Welcome to our detailed spec comparison between the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Realme 14 5G 256GB. Both phones share the same 256GB storage, a 50 MP main camera, and Android 15, but they diverge sharply when it comes to display quality, charging speed, and overall performance. Whether you care about battery endurance, audio versatility, or processing power, this comparison breaks down every key difference to help you make the right choice.

Common Features

  • Neither the Doogee Note 59 Pro nor the Realme 14 5G 256GB has a rugged build.
  • Neither the Doogee Note 59 Pro nor the Realme 14 5G 256GB can be folded.
  • Both phones share a 120Hz display refresh rate.
  • HDR10 support is not available on either product.
  • HDR10+ support is not available on either product.
  • Always-On Display is not available on either product.
  • Dolby Vision support is not available on either product.
  • Neither the Doogee Note 59 Pro nor the Realme 14 5G 256GB has a secondary screen.
  • Both phones have a touch screen.
  • Both phones come with 256GB of internal storage.
  • Both phones have integrated LTE support.
  • Both phones support 64-bit processing.
  • Both phones have integrated graphics.
  • Both phones use big.LITTLE technology.
  • Both phones feature a 50 MP main camera with an f/1.8 aperture.
  • Neither phone has a dual-lens or multi-lens main camera.
  • Neither phone has a dual-tone LED flash, and both have a single LED flash.
  • Neither phone has a BSI sensor, but both have a CMOS sensor.
  • Both phones support continuous autofocus when recording movies.
  • Both phones run Android 15.
  • Both phones provide clipboard warnings.
  • Both phones offer location privacy options.
  • Both phones offer camera and microphone privacy options.
  • Mail Privacy Protection is not available on either product.
  • Both phones support theme customization.
  • Both phones can block app tracking.
  • Cross-site tracking blocking is not available on either product.
  • Neither phone supports wireless charging.
  • Both phones support fast charging.
  • Both phones come with a charger included.
  • Neither phone has a removable battery.
  • Both phones have a battery level indicator.
  • Both phones have a rechargeable battery.
  • Neither phone supports aptX, aptX HD, aptX Adaptive, aptX Lossless, or LDAC.
  • Neither phone has a built-in radio.
  • Both phones support 5G connectivity.
  • Both phones have dual SIM card support.
  • Both phones have an external memory slot.
  • Both phones feature a USB Type-C port.
  • Both phones have a fingerprint scanner.
  • Emergency SOS via satellite is not available on either product.
  • Crash detection is not available on either product.
  • Neither phone is DLNA-certified.
  • Both phones have a video light.
  • Neither phone has a sapphire glass display.
  • Neither phone has a curved display.
  • Neither phone has an e-paper display.

Main Differences

  • Water resistance is not present on the Doogee Note 59 Pro, while the Realme 14 5G 256GB is waterproof.
  • Weight is 199 g on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 196 g on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Thickness is 8.6 mm on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 8 mm on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Width is 77.5 mm on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 75.7 mm on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Height is 168 mm on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 163.1 mm on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Volume is 111.972 cm³ on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 98.77336 cm³ on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • The display type is LCD IPS on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and OLED/AMOLED on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Screen size is 6.75″ on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 6.67″ on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Pixel density is 260 ppi on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 395 ppi on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Resolution is 720 x 1600 px on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 1080 x 2400 px on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Damage-resistant glass is present on the Realme 14 5G 256GB but not available on the Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • RAM is 8GB on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 12GB on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • The chipset is the Unisoc T8200 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • The GPU is the Mali G57 MC2 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Adreno 810 on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • CPU speed is 2 x 2.3 & 6 x 2.1 GHz on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 1 x 2.3 & 3 x 2.2 & 4 x 1.8 GHz on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • GPU clock speed is 850 MHz on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 800 MHz on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • RAM speed is 2133 MHz on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 2750 MHz on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Semiconductor size is 6 nm on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 4 nm on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Maximum memory amount is 10GB on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 16GB on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • DDR memory version is DDR4 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and DDR5 on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • The front camera is 8MP on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 16MP on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Optical image stabilization is present on the Realme 14 5G 256GB but not available on the Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Main camera video recording is 1080p at 30 fps on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 2160p at 30 fps on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Front camera aperture is f/2.2 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and f/2.4 on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Battery capacity is 6250 mAh on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 6000 mAh on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Charging speed is 18W on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 45W on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • A 3.5 mm audio jack is present on the Doogee Note 59 Pro but not available on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • Stereo speakers are present on the Realme 14 5G 256GB but not available on the Doogee Note 59 Pro.
  • Wi-Fi support covers Wi-Fi 4 and Wi-Fi 5 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro, while the Realme 14 5G 256GB also adds Wi-Fi 6 support.
  • Bluetooth version is 5.0 on the Doogee Note 59 Pro and 5.2 on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
  • NFC is present on the Doogee Note 59 Pro but not available on the Realme 14 5G 256GB.
Specs Comparison
Doogee Note 59 Pro

Doogee Note 59 Pro

Realme 14 5G 256GB

Realme 14 5G 256GB

Design:
water resistance None Waterproof
weight 199 g 196 g
thickness 8.6 mm 8 mm
width 77.5 mm 75.7 mm
height 168 mm 163.1 mm
volume 111.972 cm³ 98.77336 cm³
has a rugged build
can be folded

In terms of physical footprint, the Doogee Note 59 Pro is the larger and heavier of the two, measuring 168 × 77.5 × 8.6 mm and weighing 199 g, compared to the Realme 14 5G's more compact 163.1 × 75.7 × 8 mm frame at 196 g. While the weight difference is negligible in daily use, the Note 59 Pro's greater height and width mean it will feel noticeably bulkier in-hand and may be harder to reach across one-handed — a real consideration for users with smaller hands or those who prioritize pocket comfort.

The most meaningful differentiator in this group is water resistance: the Realme 14 5G carries a Waterproof rating, while the Doogee Note 59 Pro offers none. This is a significant real-world advantage — whether it's caught in rain, splashed near a sink, or accidentally knocked into a puddle, the Realme can survive scenarios that would likely damage the Note 59 Pro. Neither device features a rugged build or a foldable form factor, so outside of water resistance, both follow a standard smartphone design language.

The Realme 14 5G holds a clear edge in this design category. It is slimmer, slightly smaller, and crucially, water-resistant — making it the more refined and durable package of the two, without sacrificing meaningful size or weight.

Display:
Display type LCD, IPS OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.75" 6.67"
pixel density 260 ppi 395 ppi
resolution 720 x 1600 px 1080 x 2400 px
refresh rate 120Hz 120Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
supports Dolby Vision
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

The display is where the gap between these two devices becomes especially stark. The Realme 14 5G uses an OLED/AMOLED panel at 1080 × 2400 px and 395 ppi, while the Doogee Note 59 Pro relies on an LCD IPS screen at a modest 720 × 1600 px and just 260 ppi. In practice, this means the Realme renders noticeably sharper text and images — individual pixels are essentially invisible at normal viewing distances — whereas the Note 59 Pro's lower pixel density can result in visible jaggedness on fine details. Beyond sharpness, OLED technology inherently delivers deeper blacks, richer contrast, and more vibrant colors than LCD, making media consumption and everyday UI interactions feel more premium.

Both phones share a 120Hz refresh rate, which is a genuine point of parity — scrolling and animations will feel equally fluid on either device. However, the Realme adds another layer of durability with branded damage-resistant glass protecting its screen, a feature absent on the Note 59 Pro. This matters for longevity: scratch resistance directly affects how the display holds up over months of daily use without a screen protector.

The Realme 14 5G wins this category decisively. Its AMOLED panel, significantly higher resolution, and screen protection combine to deliver a display experience that the Note 59 Pro's entry-level LCD simply cannot match — the shared 120Hz refresh rate is the only area where the two stand equal.

Performance:
internal storage 256GB 256GB
RAM 8GB 12GB
Chipset (SoC) name Unisoc T8200 Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 4
GPU name Mali G57 MC2 Adreno 810
CPU speed 2 x 2.3 & 6 x 2.1 GHz 1 x 2.3 & 3 x 2.2 & 4 x 1.8 GHz
GPU clock speed 850 MHz 800 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 2133 MHz 2750 MHz
semiconductor size 6 nm 4 nm
Supports 64-bit
Has integrated graphics
Uses big.LITTLE technology
maximum memory amount 10GB 16GB
DDR memory version 4 5

At the heart of this comparison lies a meaningful chipset divide. The Realme 14 5G runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 6 Gen 4, built on a 4 nm process, while the Doogee Note 59 Pro houses the Unisoc T8200 on a 6 nm node. A smaller semiconductor size generally translates to greater power efficiency and thermal headroom, meaning the Realme's chip can sustain performance under load while consuming less battery. Qualcomm's Snapdragon lineup also benefits from a more mature and optimized ecosystem, particularly for tasks like gaming, video processing, and sustained multitasking, where the Adreno 810 GPU has a well-established track record over the Mali G57 MC2 found in the Doogee.

The memory configuration further reinforces the Realme's advantage. It ships with 12 GB of DDR5 RAM running at 2750 MHz, versus the Note 59 Pro's 8 GB of DDR4 at 2133 MHz. DDR5 not only delivers higher bandwidth but also operates more efficiently — faster memory means the CPU spends less time waiting on data, which benefits everything from app launches to browser tab switching. The Realme also supports up to 16 GB maximum memory (including virtual RAM expansion), compared to 10 GB on the Note 59 Pro, giving it more headroom for heavy multitasking scenarios.

Both devices match on storage — 256 GB each — and share architectural similarities like big.LITTLE CPU design and integrated LTE. But those points of parity don't offset the broader gap: the Realme 14 5G holds a clear performance edge through a more advanced chipset, a newer memory standard, and higher RAM capacity, all of which compound into a meaningfully snappier and more future-proof daily experience.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 50 MP 50 MP
wide aperture (main camera) 1.8f 1.8f
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 8MP 16MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 1080 x 30 fps 2160 x 30 fps
Has a dual-tone LED flash
number of flash LEDs 1 1
has a BSI sensor
has a CMOS sensor
has continuous autofocus when recording movies
Has phase-detection autofocus for photos
supports slow-motion video recording
has a built-in HDR mode
has manual exposure
has a flash
optical zoom 0x 0x
has manual ISO
has a serial shot mode
has manual focus
has a front camera
Has laser autofocus
Shoots 360° panorama
has manual white balance
shoots raw
has touch autofocus
has manual shutter speed
can create panoramas in-camera
wide aperture (front camera) 2.2f 2.4f
Has timelapse function
Has a front-facing LED flash
has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) front camera
supports HDR10 recording
supports Dolby Vision recording
has a front-facing camera under the display
Has a RGB LED flash
has 3D photo/video recording capabilities

On paper, the two main cameras look virtually identical — both shoot at 50 MP with an f/1.8 aperture, share the same autofocus systems, and offer an equally broad set of manual controls. The real divergence emerges in two areas that matter considerably in practice. First, the Realme 14 5G is equipped with optical image stabilization (OIS), which the Doogee Note 59 Pro entirely lacks. OIS physically compensates for hand tremor during capture, making a tangible difference in sharpness for handheld shots — especially in low light where longer exposures amplify blur. Without it, the Note 59 Pro relies solely on software stabilization, which is a less reliable substitute.

Video capability is the second major gap. The Realme records up to 4K (2160p) at 30 fps, while the Note 59 Pro tops out at 1080p at 30 fps. For users who shoot video regularly, this is a significant ceiling — 4K footage retains far more detail when cropped, reframed, or viewed on larger screens. The selfie camera adds another layer to the Realme's advantage: its 16 MP front shooter versus the Note 59 Pro's 8 MP unit means noticeably more detail in portraits and video calls, even if the Note 59 Pro's slightly wider f/2.2 aperture (versus f/2.4) offers a marginal light-intake edge that is unlikely to offset the resolution gap in most conditions.

The Realme 14 5G takes a clear win in this category. The combination of OIS, 4K video recording, and a higher-resolution front camera represents a meaningfully more capable imaging package — the shared main camera resolution and feature set make the Note 59 Pro competitive in still photography, but the Realme pulls ahead wherever motion, stability, or video quality come into play.

Operating system:
Android version Android 15 Android 15
has clipboard warnings
has location privacy options
has camera/microphone privacy options
has Mail Privacy Protection
has theme customization
can block app tracking
blocks cross-site tracking
has on-device machine learning
has notification permissions
has media picker
Can play games while they download
has dark mode
has Wi-Fi password sharing
has battery health check
has an extra dim mode
has focus modes
has dynamic theming
can offload apps
Has customizable notifications
has Live Text
has full-page screenshots
supports split screen
gets direct OS updates
has PiP
Can be used as a PC
Has sharing intents
has a child lock
Supports widgets
Is free and open source
Has offline voice recognition
has voice commands
Tracks the current position of a mobile device
is a multi-user system
has Quick Start

This is a rare category where the two devices are in complete lockstep. Both the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Realme 14 5G ship with Android 15 and share an identical feature set across every tracked specification — from privacy controls like camera and microphone permissions, location options, and app tracking blockers, to productivity staples like split-screen multitasking, Picture-in-Picture, widgets, and full-page screenshots. There is simply no daylight between them on paper.

The shared foundation covers user-facing quality-of-life features as well: both offer dark mode, dynamic theming, customizable notifications, on-device machine learning, and offline voice recognition. Neither device receives direct OS updates from Google, meaning both will depend on their respective manufacturers for software patches and future Android upgrades — a point worth noting for long-term software support expectations, though it applies equally to both.

This group is a dead tie. Every specified feature is identical across both devices, so the operating system experience offers no basis for choosing one over the other. Users should look to the other spec categories — display, performance, or cameras — to inform their decision here.

Battery:
battery power 6250 mAh 6000 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 18W 45W
comes with a charger
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

Battery capacity is the one hardware category where the Doogee Note 59 Pro pulls ahead, packing a 6250 mAh cell versus the Realme 14 5G's 6000 mAh. The 250 mAh difference is modest — in real-world terms, it might translate to an extra 20–40 minutes of screen-on time depending on usage — so neither phone is likely to struggle with endurance. Both sit well above the mainstream 5000 mAh threshold, making multi-day battery life a realistic expectation for moderate users on either device.

Where the Realme reclaims ground is charging speed. Its 45W fast charging is more than double the Note 59 Pro's 18W, and that gap is felt acutely in daily use. A 45W charger can typically replenish a 6000 mAh battery to around 50% in roughly 30 minutes, whereas 18W charging on a larger 6250 mAh cell will take considerably longer to reach the same threshold. For users who charge opportunistically — during a commute, a lunch break, or between meetings — faster charging is often more practical than a marginally larger battery. Both phones ship with a charger included and lack wireless charging, so those variables are neutralized.

This category comes down to a trade-off rather than a clear sweep: the Note 59 Pro offers slightly more raw capacity, but the Realme 14 5G has the practical edge thanks to its significantly faster 45W charging, which compensates for the smaller battery in most real-world scenarios where time-to-charge matters more than a marginal capacity advantage.

Audio:
has a socket for a 3.5 mm audio jack
has stereo speakers
has aptX
has LDAC
has aptX HD
has aptX Adaptive
has aptX Lossless
Has a radio

Audio is another category defined by a direct trade-off, with each device making a different hardware bet. The Doogee Note 59 Pro retains a 3.5 mm headphone jack, while the Realme 14 5G drops it in favor of stereo speakers. Neither choice is objectively superior — it depends entirely on how a user primarily consumes audio. The headphone jack is a meaningful convenience for anyone with a collection of wired headphones or earphones, enabling lossless, latency-free listening without adapters or battery management. For that audience, the Note 59 Pro's retention of the jack is a genuine practical advantage.

On the other hand, stereo speakers on the Realme deliver a substantially wider and more immersive soundstage for speakerphone calls, media playback, and gaming compared to a mono speaker setup. A second speaker — typically positioned at the earpiece — creates left-right separation that makes content feel more enveloping, and is especially noticeable when watching video in landscape orientation. Neither phone supports advanced Bluetooth audio codecs like aptX or LDAC, so wireless audio quality is on equal footing between the two.

Declaring a winner here hinges on use case: wired headphone users will prefer the Doogee Note 59 Pro, while those who lean on their phone's built-in speakers for media will find the Realme 14 5G's stereo output more satisfying. Given that wireless earbuds have become the dominant audio accessory and the headphone jack is increasingly a niche feature, the Realme's stereo speakers arguably serve a broader user base — but this one genuinely calls for personal preference to be the deciding factor.

Connectivity & Features:
release date March 2025 March 2025
has 5G support
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax)
SIM cards 2 SIM 2 SIM
Bluetooth version 5 5.2
has an external memory slot
Has USB Type-C
has NFC
Has a fingerprint scanner
has emergency SOS via satellite
has crash detection
is DLNA-certified
has a gyroscope
supports ANT+
Has a heart rate monitor
has GPS
has a compass
supports Wi-Fi
Has an infrared sensor
has an accelerometer
has a cellular module
Has a barometer
has an HDMI output
Uses 3D facial recognition
Has an iris scanner
Stylus included
supports Galileo
Has motion tracking
Has optical tracking
Has a built-in projector

Much of the connectivity foundation is shared between these two devices — both support 5G, dual SIM, USB Type-C, expandable storage, and an identical set of onboard sensors including GPS, gyroscope, accelerometer, and compass. The divergence emerges in three specific areas. Wi-Fi is one of them: the Realme 14 5G supports Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) in addition to Wi-Fi 4 and 5, while the Note 59 Pro tops out at Wi-Fi 5. Wi-Fi 6 delivers better throughput in congested network environments — particularly relevant in apartments, offices, or public spaces with many competing devices — and offers improved power efficiency during wireless transfers.

Bluetooth tells a similar story. The Realme carries Bluetooth 5.2 versus the Note 59 Pro's 5.0, a generational step that brings incremental improvements in connection stability and audio stream handling, which can be noticeable when using wireless earbuds or speakers. The more consequential difference, however, is NFC: the Doogee Note 59 Pro includes it, the Realme 14 5G does not. NFC enables contactless payments, quick Bluetooth pairing, and tap-to-transfer functionality — for users who regularly use mobile payments or transit cards, its absence on the Realme is a tangible daily inconvenience.

This group ends in a genuine split. The Realme 14 5G edges ahead on wireless technology with Wi-Fi 6 and a newer Bluetooth version, but the Doogee Note 59 Pro counters with NFC — a feature whose value is highly personal. Users who prioritize modern wireless performance will lean toward the Realme; those who depend on contactless payments or NFC-based workflows will find the Note 59 Pro's inclusion of it a deciding factor.

Miscellaneous:
has a video light
Has sapphire glass display
Has a curved display
Has an e-paper display

The Miscellaneous category offers nothing to separate these two devices — every tracked specification is identical. Both the Doogee Note 59 Pro and the Realme 14 5G include a video light, and neither features a sapphire glass display, curved screen, or e-paper panel. These are broadly standard characteristics for mainstream smartphones in this segment, so their presence or absence here carries little weight in any buying decision.

This is a complete tie by the data provided. Users should place no weight on this category when choosing between the two devices and instead rely on the more substantive differences identified across design, display, performance, cameras, and connectivity.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After reviewing every specification, it is clear that these two phones target different types of users. The Doogee Note 59 Pro stands out for those who need a larger battery (6250 mAh), a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and NFC support, making it a solid pick for users who prioritize endurance and everyday connectivity. On the other hand, the Realme 14 5G 256GB appeals to users who want a sharper OLED display at 395 ppi, significantly faster 45W charging, a more powerful Snapdragon 6 Gen 4 chipset, OIS-backed camera recording at 4K, stereo speakers, and waterproofing. If raw display quality and performance matter most, the Realme is the stronger all-round package.

Doogee Note 59 Pro
Buy Doogee Note 59 Pro if...

Buy the Doogee Note 59 Pro if you want a larger 6250 mAh battery, a 3.5 mm headphone jack, and NFC support at a likely lower price point.

Realme 14 5G 256GB
Buy Realme 14 5G 256GB if...

Buy the Realme 14 5G 256GB if you prioritize a sharper OLED display, faster 45W charging, superior processing power, 4K video recording, stereo speakers, and waterproofing.