Are the Realme C100 and C100i official? Who can say, but someone over in Thailand posted a fairly detailed hands-on with the two phones and the C100 is up on at least one retailer.
The Realme C100 is a large and relatively cheap phone – retailer BaNANA has the 4/128GB model at THB 7,000 ($215) and the 6/128GB model at THB 7,500 ($$230).
The C100 has a 6.8” display, a 720p+ LCD with 144Hz refresh rate and 900 nits of brightness. The phone measures 166.3 x 78.1 x 8.45mm and weighs 210g. It is rated IP64 (dust proof, splash resistant) and has a drop-resistant design.
Inside it is a large 7,000mAh battery that only supports slow 15W charging. Besides the USB-C port, there is a 3.5mm headphone jack and even a microSD slot.
The Realme C100 has a 3.5mm headphone jack and a microSD slot
The phone is powered by the Dimensity 6300 and, as we mentioned above, you can choose between 4GB and 6GB of RAM. The built-in storage is fixed at 128GB, but you can expand it if necessary, which is a rare privilege these days.
The C100 has a 50MP rear camera and a 5MP selfie (inside a notch). There is no word on the fingerprint reader placement, but there should be a reader somewhere.
At this point you are probably wondering what makes the C100 different from the likes of the Realme C85 and Narzo 90X. And if you weren’t, we were. A quick comparison shows a few differences, most notably the slow charging (the C85 and 90X do 45W and 60W, respectively, which is much more fitting of a 7,000mAh battery) and worse water resistance (the C85 and 90X have IP68/IP69K and IP65 ratings, respectively). Those two also have 8MP selfie cameras, but 5MP, 8MP, whatever.
You may also have been wondering – we were – whether the C85 is available in Thailand. Indeed it is and an 8/128GB unit costs THB 8,000. That’s THB 500 more for 2 extra gigs of RAM plus all the other advantages of the C85. It looks odd, but the math is clear – C85 > C100.
We couldn’t find the Realme C100i at a retailer, so we turn our attention to the hands-on post. Apparently, the C100i is the cheaper variant that also has a 6.8” 120Hz 720p+ LCD (900 nits) and a 7,000mAh battery.
Realme C100 and C100i (source)
The C100i is a bit thinner at 8.35mm while retaining the 3.5mm headphone jack and the durable build – the phone has passed MIL-STD-810H testing and has survived drops from 2m. It’s also rated IP64.
Our tipster pointed us to a Geekbench result (thanks!) that shows a Unisoc UMS9230 chipset, which is usually labeled T606 or T616. This is a 12nm chip with low clocks for the Cortex-A75 and A55 cores. Crucially, the modem only supports 4G.
Realme C100 and C100i (source)
You shouldn’t be surprised when we tell you that the Realme C85 4G exists – it’s powered by the venerable Snapdragon 685, which has even older CPU cores (Cortex-A73 and A53), but at least it’s fabbed on a more recent 6nm node. We don’t know the price of the C100i, but the C85 4G is THB 6,000 for an 8/128GB model over on BaNANA.
