Xiaomi’s new turbo menu: is your phone about to take off?


Xiaomi just rolled out something… interesting. A “Chip Performance Panel” for the Xiaomi 15S Pro. It’s not a flashy new hardware launch—more like letting users peek under the hood and tweak things manually. And yes, it’s a bit of a geek’s playground. But, honestly, I think some everyday users might tinker too.

Xiaomi HyperOS

What’s different this time?

If your 15S Pro is running the XRING O1 chip, and you head into developer options, you’ll find a new menu tucked away. It’s Beta, so you have to opt in. Cisco—or sorry, Xiaomi—lets you play with voltage and frequency settings, per core group. You want more juice on the big cores? Go ahead. Dial back the smaller ones? Sure. Tread carefully, though—you’ll have to reboot before the tweaks take effect.

xiaomi chip performance panel

What’s neat is the built-in safety net: if you push too hard and it crashes (which you might, let’s be honest), the phone will autonomously revert to default settings. That’s a decent guardrail, especially since this is new ground. You won’t brick the device—at least not without trying on purpose.

Why this matters (or maybe doesn’t)

On paper, this feels like a power-user dream. Think gamers, benchmark junkies, or anyone chasing higher sustained performance. Give them core‑level voltage control and, well, watch the fireworks—sometimes literally. But for most people? Probably overkill. I mean, how many of us are actually blurting out “lets tweak big‑core frequencies by 50 MHz”?

xiaomi chip performance panel

Yet, it signals Xiaomi’s direction: they want ultra‑customization to be a selling point. And in a crowded smartphone market, that might carve out a niche. Still, it raises a question—should the average user wade into developer-level settings? Maybe not. But if you’re curious, go ahead. Just don’t say I didn’t warn you that it’s a bit like handing you a slingshot in a pottery shop.

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Xiaomi’s chip performance panel: A few thoughts, loosely held

  • Yes, you can tweak every core group. Nice.
  • It’s Beta—so expect bugs. The occasional glitch is almost a given.
  • It’s only for the XRING O1 chip. Older Xiaomi phones? Nope.
  • The auto-reset is thoughtful. But what happens if a tweak repeatedly crashes the system? Guess you’ll find out. Maybe you’ll get locked out of your fine-tuned setup.

If this stays in Beta too long, people might get antsy. Or maybe it’ll evolve into something more user-friendly—an “eco mode,” “turbo mode,” etc. I’d like that. Give me a one‑tap switch rather than live‑voltage‑adjustment. Sticking in minutiae is cool, but only if you care about it.

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