
The iQOO 15 Ultra has shown up on AnTuTu ahead of its launch, and the numbers are hard to miss. iQOO product director Galant V has shared the score on Weibo, and here’s whta story they tell.
The the iQOO 15 Ultra scores 4,518,403 points on AnTuTu, which is apparently the highest on the platform. The breakdown shows 1,322,001 for CPU, 1,594,848 for GPU, 593,523 for memory, and 1,008,031 for UX on AnTuTu. The memory score is not at the top of the chart, but the CPU and GPU numbers are doing most of the work. Just to gain perspective, in our internal testing, the iQOO 15 scored 3,842,375 points on AnTuTu. The results may differ but there should be some better software optimisation with the 15 Ultra.
Behind this performance of the iQOO 15 Ultra is Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 8 Elite Gen 5 chipset, paired with LPDDR5x RAM and UFS 4.1 storage. The chipset has been found on most Android flagships of the year including the OnePlus 15, iQOO 15, the Xiaomi 17 series and the OPPO Find X9 series.
Battery size could be another headline spec. Reports point to a capacity above 7,000mAh, along with very fast charging that could reach 200W, though iQOO has not confirmed this yet.
The display is expected to be a large 6.85-inch LTPO OLED panel with 2K resolution and a high refresh rate, likely 144Hz or higher. Camera details are limited, but current information points to a triple 50MP rear setup, possibly including a periscope telephoto lens. Cameras do not appear to be the main priority, but they are not being stripped back either.
In practical terms, the iQOO 15 Ultra looks aimed at users who care about sustained performance rather than short benchmark spikes. That puts it closer to phones like ASUS’ now-discontinued ROG lineup or RedMagic devices than mainstream flagships from Samsung or Apple.
iQOO has confirmed an early February 2026 launch in China, with pre-orders already open. There is no clarity yet on a launch outside China.
The iQOO 15 Ultra looks built to underline the brand’s focus on performance and gaming, rather than a mass-market flagship. For buyers, it makes sense mainly if long gaming sessions, stable frame rates, and features like active cooling matter. If you want a powerful phone for everyday use, the regular iQOO 15 or mainstream flagships from Samsung or Apple are likely to feel more practical.