Motorola Edge 60 Fusion
Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G

Motorola Edge 60 Fusion Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G

Overview

Welcome to our in-depth comparison between the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G — two mid-range 5G contenders that share a surprising amount of common ground while diverging sharply in key areas. From battery capacity and charging speed to design choices, camera capabilities, and display features, these two phones each make compelling arguments for different types of users. Read on to see how they stack up across every major specification.

Common Features

  • Both phones have an IP68 ingress protection rating.
  • Neither phone has a rugged build.
  • Neither phone can be folded.
  • Both phones feature an OLED/AMOLED display type.
  • Both phones have a 120Hz refresh rate.
  • Both phones have branded damage-resistant glass.
  • HDR10 support is available on both phones.
  • HDR10+ support is available on both phones.
  • Neither phone has a secondary screen.
  • Both phones have a touchscreen.
  • Both phones come with 512GB internal storage and 12GB RAM.
  • Both phones use the Mali G615 MC2 GPU running at 1047 MHz.
  • Both phones have integrated LTE and 5G support.
  • Both phones use a 4nm semiconductor and support 64-bit processing.
  • Both phones have a multi-lens main camera with optical image stabilization.
  • Both phones support 4K video recording at 30fps on the main camera.
  • Both phones run Android 15.
  • Fast charging is supported on both phones, though neither supports wireless charging.
  • Neither phone has a removable battery.
  • Both phones have stereo speakers but lack a 3.5mm audio jack.
  • Both phones support Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, USB Type-C, and dual SIM.

Main Differences

  • Water resistance is present on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion but not available on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Weight is 180.1g on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 211g on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Thickness is 8.25mm on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 7.8mm on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Width is 73.08mm on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 78.1mm on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Screen size is 6.67″ on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 6.83″ on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Touch sampling rate is 300Hz on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 240Hz on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Always-On Display is available on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G but not on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion.
  • Dolby Vision support is present on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G but not available on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion.
  • The chipset is MediaTek Dimensity 7300 on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and MediaTek Dimensity 7400 on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • CPU speed is 4 x 2.5 & 4 x 2 GHz on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 4 x 2.6 & 4 x 2 GHz on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Secondary camera resolution is 13MP on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 8MP on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Front camera resolution is 32MP on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 20MP on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • RAW photo capture is supported on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion but not available on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Battery capacity is 5200mAh on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 7000mAh on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • Charging speed is 68W on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and 45W on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • LDAC audio support is available on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G but not on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion.
  • A microSD card slot is present on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion but not available on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G.
  • An infrared sensor is present on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G but not on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion.
  • A curved display is featured on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion but the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G has a flat display.
Specs Comparison
Motorola Edge 60 Fusion

Motorola Edge 60 Fusion

Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G

Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G

Design:
water resistance Waterproof None
weight 180.1 g 211 g
thickness 8.25 mm 7.8 mm
width 73.08 mm 78.1 mm
height 161.2 mm 163.6 mm
volume 97.189092 cm³ 99.661848 cm³
Ingress Protection (IP) rating IP68 IP68
has a rugged build
can be folded

The most consequential design difference between these two phones is weight. The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion comes in at a notably lighter 180.1 g, while the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G tips the scales at 211 g — a gap of roughly 30 grams that is very perceptible in daily one-handed use, extended calls, or prolonged scrolling sessions. Alongside this, the Edge 60 Fusion is also meaningfully narrower at 73.08 mm versus 78.1 mm, which translates directly to a more comfortable thumb reach across the screen and easier single-hand grip for users with average or smaller hands.

On thickness, the equation flips: the Redmi Note 15 Pro is the slimmer device at 7.8 mm compared to the Edge 60 Fusion's 8.25 mm. The difference is modest — less than half a millimeter — and unlikely to be felt in a pocket or case. Both phones are non-foldable and lack a rugged build designation, so neither targets outdoor or ruggedized use cases.

Water protection is where a notable data point emerges: the Edge 60 Fusion carries an IP68 rating and is explicitly classified as waterproof, offering meaningful peace of mind against submersion. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G also lists an IP68 rating but has no corresponding waterproof classification in its specs — users should verify this detail independently before relying on it. Taking the provided data at face value, the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion holds a clear design advantage: it is significantly lighter, more pocketable in width, and carries confirmed waterproofing — making it the more practical and comfortable everyday device of the two.

Display:
Display type OLED/AMOLED OLED/AMOLED
screen size 6.67" 6.83"
pixel density 446 ppi 443 ppi
resolution 1220 x 2712 px 1220 x 2772 px
refresh rate 120Hz 120Hz
touch sampling rate 300Hz 240Hz
has branded damage-resistant glass
supports HDR10
supports HDR10+
Always-On Display
supports Dolby Vision
Has a secondary screen
has a touch screen

At their core, both displays are remarkably well-matched. Each uses an OLED/AMOLED panel, delivers a 120Hz refresh rate for fluid scrolling and animations, and lands at virtually identical pixel densities — 446 ppi on the Edge 60 Fusion versus 443 ppi on the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G. In practice, no human eye will distinguish that 3 ppi gap; sharpness is essentially equal on both. Both also support HDR10 and HDR10+ and carry branded damage-resistant glass, so durability and HDR content compatibility are level ground.

Where the Redmi Note 15 Pro pulls ahead is in its additional display features. It supports Dolby Vision, which is a more premium HDR format favored by Netflix and Apple TV+, meaning compatible streaming content will render with finer dynamic range calibration than the Edge 60 Fusion can achieve. It also includes an Always-On Display, a quality-of-life feature for glancing at time and notifications without waking the screen — something the Edge 60 Fusion entirely lacks. The Redmi's screen is also slightly larger at 6.83″ versus 6.67″, which benefits media consumption and multitasking, though this comes with the trade-off of the wider chassis noted in the design comparison.

The Edge 60 Fusion counters with a higher touch sampling rate of 300Hz compared to the Redmi's 240Hz, which results in lower input latency — a meaningful edge for mobile gaming and fast-paced interactions. Still, that single advantage does not outweigh the Redmi's combination of Dolby Vision support, Always-On Display, and larger screen real estate. For users who prioritize media quality and display versatility, the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G holds the display advantage in this group.

Performance:
internal storage 512GB 512GB
RAM 12GB 12GB
Chipset (SoC) name MediaTek Dimensity 7300 MediaTek Dimensity 7400
GPU name Mali G615 MC2 Mali G615 MC2
CPU speed 4 x 2.5 & 4 x 2 GHz 4 x 2.6 & 4 x 2 GHz
GPU clock speed 1047 MHz 1047 MHz
Has integrated LTE
RAM speed 6400 MHz 6400 MHz
semiconductor size 4 nm 4 nm
Supports 64-bit
DirectX version DirectX 12 DirectX 12
Has integrated graphics
Uses big.LITTLE technology
CPU threads 8 threads 8 threads
Uses HMP
maximum memory amount 16GB 16GB
number of transistors 6200 million 6200 million
DDR memory version 5 5
supported displays 1 1

Few performance comparisons are this close. Both phones run on a MediaTek Dimensity chip built on a 4 nm process, carry 12 GB of LPDDR5 RAM clocked at 6400 MHz, offer 512 GB of internal storage, and share an identical GPU — the Mali G615 MC2 running at 1047 MHz. Transistor count, thread count, DirectX 12 support, HMP scheduling, and maximum memory ceiling of 16 GB are all mirrored exactly. For the vast majority of everyday tasks — app switching, browsing, social media, and casual gaming — these two phones will feel indistinguishable.

The sole differentiator lies in the specific Dimensity variant each device uses. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G runs the Dimensity 7400, while the Edge 60 Fusion uses the Dimensity 7300. The 7400 clocks its performance cores at 2.6 GHz versus the 7300's 2.5 GHz — a 100 MHz advantage on the big cores. This gap is narrow and unlikely to produce noticeable differences in typical use, but under sustained CPU-heavy workloads such as extended gaming, video encoding, or large file processing, the Redmi's chip holds a theoretical throughput edge.

Taken as a whole, this is one of the most evenly matched performance groupings possible — virtually every architectural parameter is shared. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G carries a marginal performance edge strictly due to its higher-clocked Dimensity 7400, but buyers should not expect a perceptible real-world difference between these two devices in day-to-day use.

Cameras:
megapixels (main camera) 50 & 13 MP 50 & 8 MP
Has a dual-lens (or multi-lens) main camera
megapixels (front camera) 32MP 20MP
has built-in optical image stabilization
video recording (main camera) 2160 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
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

Both cameras share a solid common foundation: a 50 MP primary sensor with OIS, phase-detection autofocus, 4K/30fps video recording, and an identical feature set covering HDR mode, slow-motion, timelapse, panorama, and a full suite of manual controls including ISO, focus, exposure, and white balance. For everyday shooting, these similarities mean the core camera experience will feel closely aligned on both devices.

The differences, while few, are meaningful. On the secondary rear lens, the Edge 60 Fusion pairs its main sensor with a 13 MP secondary camera, compared to just 8 MP on the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G. A higher-resolution secondary lens retains more detail when shooting ultra-wide or macro scenes, giving the Edge 60 Fusion more flexibility in that role. The selfie camera gap is equally notable — the Edge 60 Fusion offers a 32 MP front camera versus the Redmi's 20 MP, a significant difference for users who prioritize portrait selfies or video calls. More megapixels on a front sensor allows for greater cropping and detail retention, especially in good lighting.

Perhaps the most telling differentiator for photography enthusiasts is RAW shooting support: the Edge 60 Fusion can capture RAW image files, while the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G cannot. RAW output gives users full post-processing control in editing software, preserving far more image data than a compressed JPEG. Combined with its stronger secondary and front cameras, the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion holds a clear camera advantage in this group — particularly for users who care about selfie quality or hands-on photo editing.

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 the rarest outcome in a spec comparison: a perfect tie across every single data point. Both the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion and the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G run Android 15, share an identical privacy feature set — including location controls, camera/microphone permissions, app tracking blocking, and clipboard warnings — and offer the same productivity and usability tools such as split-screen multitasking, Picture-in-Picture, dynamic theming, widgets, and on-device machine learning.

Notably, both devices also share the same limitations: neither gets direct OS updates (meaning updates are routed through the manufacturer rather than pushed by Google directly), neither blocks cross-site tracking at the OS level, and neither supports Wi-Fi password sharing or focus modes. These are not dealbreakers, but they are worth noting for privacy-conscious users comparing against other platforms.

With no divergence across any of the provided specs, this group produces a complete draw. A buyer's OS experience will be shaped more by each manufacturer's custom Android skin and their respective update cadence commitments — factors that fall outside the scope of the provided data — than by any underlying OS-level feature difference between these two phones.

Battery:
battery power 5200 mAh 7000 mAh
has wireless charging
Supports fast charging
charging speed 68W 45W
has a removable battery
has a battery level indicator
has a rechargeable battery

Battery is where these two phones diverge most dramatically. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G houses a massive 7000 mAh cell, compared to the Edge 60 Fusion's already-respectable 5200 mAh. That 1800 mAh gap is substantial — in practical terms, it translates to meaningfully longer endurance between charges, making the Redmi a compelling choice for heavy users, frequent travelers, or anyone who regularly struggles to reach the end of a day on a single charge.

The Edge 60 Fusion fights back on the charging side, offering 68W fast charging versus the Redmi's 45W. Faster wattage means less time tethered to a wall outlet — the Edge 60 Fusion will replenish its battery significantly quicker in absolute minutes per charge cycle. However, it is worth contextualizing this: the Redmi's larger battery means it has considerably more capacity to refill, so real-world charge times will depend on both variables together. Neither phone supports wireless charging, putting them on equal footing there.

The trade-off here is classic endurance versus speed. For users who value going longer between charges — particularly those in situations where outlets are scarce — the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G holds a clear battery advantage by virtue of its significantly larger 7000 mAh capacity. The Edge 60 Fusion's faster 68W charging is a genuine perk, but it serves a different priority: minimizing downtime when you do plug in, rather than maximizing the time before you need to.

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

Shared ground first: both phones drop the 3.5mm audio jack and replace it with wireless-only listening, and both feature stereo speakers for on-device playback. For casual media consumption without headphones, the experience will be equivalent on either device.

Where they diverge is in wireless audio codec support. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G includes LDAC, Sony's high-resolution Bluetooth audio codec capable of transmitting up to three times more data than standard Bluetooth audio. For users with LDAC-compatible headphones or earbuds, this unlocks noticeably higher audio fidelity over a wireless connection — a meaningful advantage for audiophiles or anyone who has invested in quality wireless audio hardware. The Edge 60 Fusion lacks LDAC entirely, along with any other high-resolution codec, meaning Bluetooth audio is limited to standard quality regardless of the headphones used.

It is a single spec difference, but it is a decisive one for the right user. Casual listeners who rely primarily on speakers or standard Bluetooth will not feel the gap, but for those who stream lossless audio or own premium wireless headphones, the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G holds a clear audio advantage thanks to its LDAC support.

Connectivity & Features:
release date April 2025 August 2025
has 5G support
Wi-Fi version Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac), Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax)
SIM cards 2 SIM 2 SIM
Bluetooth version 5.4 5.4
has an external memory slot
Has USB Type-C
USB version 2 2
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

Connectivity fundamentals are identical between these two devices: both support 5G, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.4, NFC, dual SIM, USB Type-C, and the same suite of motion sensors — gyroscope, accelerometer, compass, and GPS with Galileo support. For the overwhelming majority of connectivity use cases, from mobile payments to fast wireless networking to location accuracy, users will find no practical difference between them.

Two exclusive features separate the phones. The Edge 60 Fusion includes a microSD card slot for expandable storage, while the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G does not — a meaningful distinction for users who want to store large media libraries, offload files, or simply future-proof their storage without paying upfront for a higher base capacity. Conversely, the Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G carries an infrared sensor, which allows the phone to function as a universal remote control for TVs, air conditioners, and other IR-compatible appliances — a niche but genuinely useful feature the Edge 60 Fusion lacks entirely.

These two advantages pull in different directions and serve different user priorities. The expandable storage on the Edge 60 Fusion is arguably the more broadly useful feature, benefiting a wider range of users day-to-day. The Redmi's infrared sensor is more situational but highly valued by those who use it. Given that storage flexibility tends to have wider practical impact, the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion holds a slight connectivity edge — but buyers who frequently use IR remotes will find the Redmi's exclusive feature equally compelling.

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

This is a compact spec group with a single meaningful differentiator. Both phones share a video light and neither features sapphire glass or an e-paper display — leaving the curved display on the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion as the only distinguishing factor here.

A curved screen edges the display over the sides of the device, creating a sleeker, more premium aesthetic and reducing the visual presence of bezels when viewed straight-on. It can also make swipe gestures from the edge feel more natural. The trade-off is practical: curved displays are generally more prone to accidental touch inputs at the edges and can be harder to protect with standard flat-glass screen protectors. The Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G's flat display sidesteps these concerns entirely, offering better case compatibility and easier screen protection — priorities that matter to many users.

Whether the curved screen is an advantage or a limitation is genuinely a matter of personal preference. Design-focused users who value aesthetics will favor the Edge 60 Fusion's look, while pragmatic users who prioritize repairability and accessory compatibility may prefer the Redmi's flat panel. Based strictly on the provided data, this group is best called a draw — the curved display is a differentiator, but not an unambiguous advantage for either side.

Comparison Summary & Verdict

After examining every specification, it is clear that both phones serve distinct audiences. The Motorola Edge 60 Fusion stands out for users who value a lighter, more compact build with certified water resistance, a curved display, faster 68W charging, a higher-resolution front camera, and RAW photo support — making it a strong pick for photography enthusiasts and those who prefer a premium in-hand feel. The Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G, on the other hand, is purpose-built for power users who need an exceptional 7000 mAh battery, a larger screen with Dolby Vision and Always-On Display, LDAC audio, an infrared sensor, and a slightly faster chipset. Neither phone is a clear overall winner — your ideal choice comes down to whether you prioritize portability and camera versatility or endurance and multimedia features.

Motorola Edge 60 Fusion
Buy Motorola Edge 60 Fusion if...

Buy the Motorola Edge 60 Fusion if you want a lighter phone with water resistance, faster 68W charging, RAW photo capture, and a higher-resolution selfie camera.

Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G
Buy Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G if...

Buy the Xiaomi Redmi Note 15 Pro 5G if you prioritize a massive 7000 mAh battery, a larger display with Dolby Vision and Always-On support, LDAC audio, and a built-in infrared sensor.