The 10 Fastest Android Phones of August 2025, Ranked by AnTuTu

The AnTuTu 10 benchmark has released its performance ranking for August 2025, and the gaming flagship Red Magic 10 Pro, powered by Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite, secured the top spot.
Qualcomm continues to dominate the high-performance segment: seven out of ten devices in the ranking are built on the Snapdragon 8 Elite platform. MediaTek’s Dimensity 9400 held two positions with the vivo X200 Pro and X200 Pro mini, while Samsung’s Galaxy S25 Ultra with a customized Snapdragon 8 Elite OC version rounded out the list at tenth place.
Top 10 Smartphones (Total Score – AnTuTu 10)
- Red Magic 10 Pro (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 12/256) — 2,670,065
- iQOO 13 (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 16/512) — 2,648,446
- iQOO Neo10 Pro+ (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 12/256) — 2,537,149
- OnePlus 13 (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 16/512) — 2,499,396
- Poco F7 Ultra (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 16/512) — 2,438,753
- Mi 15 Ultra (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 16/512) — 2,427,215
- vivo X200 Pro (Dimensity 9400, 12/256) — 2,411,591
- Mi 15 (Snapdragon 8 Elite, 12/512) — 2,377,260
- vivo X200 Pro mini (Dimensity 9400, 12/256) — 2,314,890
- Galaxy S25 Ultra (Snapdragon 8 Elite OC, 12/256) — 2,156,040
Key Insights
- Gaming optimization makes the difference. The Red Magic 10 Pro tops the global ranking thanks to advanced cooling systems and aggressive performance tuning.
- Qualcomm’s dominance. Snapdragon 8 Elite powers seven out of ten devices, occupying almost the entire upper half of the chart.
- MediaTek’s challenge. The Dimensity 9400 shows strong results with two entries (7th and 9th places), though still behind Snapdragon in total performance.
- Samsung’s surprise. The Galaxy S25 Ultra, despite using the Snapdragon 8 Elite OC variant, delivered notably lower GPU scores, likely due to thermal and power consumption limits in its standard performance profile.
- Memory configurations matter. Devices equipped with 16 GB RAM / 512 GB storage consistently rank higher, driven by stronger MEM and UX subscores.
How AnTuTu 10 Measures Performance
The benchmark aggregates four core components: CPU, GPU, MEM, and UX. Final results depend on factors such as firmware version, performance mode, device temperature, and memory capacity. Real-world usage may therefore differ slightly from these «laboratory» results.