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.