Wireless connectivity is where the Honor 400 Pro pulls meaningfully ahead. It supports Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be), the latest generation of Wi-Fi, while the Realme 14 Pro Plus tops out at Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax). In practical terms, Wi-Fi 7 delivers significantly lower latency, better performance in congested network environments, and higher theoretical throughput — benefits that become tangible in dense urban settings or households with many connected devices. This is also reflected in the maximum download speed figures: the Honor supports up to 10,000 Mbps versus the Realme's 2,900 Mbps, a gap that points to a far more capable 5G modem in the Honor as well. Bluetooth also favors the Honor, with version 5.4 against the Realme's 5.2, bringing incremental improvements in connection stability and efficiency for wireless peripherals.
Two feature-level differences add further separation. The Honor includes an infrared (IR) blaster, which allows it to function as a universal remote for TVs, air conditioners, and other home appliances — a genuinely useful everyday feature that the Realme entirely lacks. Both phones share a solid common foundation: dual SIM, NFC for contactless payments, USB Type-C, fingerprint scanner, GPS with Galileo support, gyroscope, and accelerometer are all present on each device.
The Honor 400 Pro is the clear winner in this category. Wi-Fi 7, a dramatically faster cellular modem, a newer Bluetooth version, and the addition of an IR blaster collectively represent a meaningful connectivity and features advantage — none of which the Realme offsets with any unique spec of its own.