Why settle for boring when your phone can double as the life of the party? The nubia Music Pro is built for music lovers, casual listeners, and anyone who wants their phone to be as fun and vibrant as they are. With its bold design, oversized speakers, and music-first features, it doesn’t just blend into the crowd—it stands out and makes itself heard, both literally and figuratively.
Design and form factor
The nubia Music Pro is unapologetically bold. Its design centerpiece is the oversized orange loudspeaker on the back, which nubia claims blasts audio up to 600% louder than a typical entry-level handset.

And then there’s the RGB LED Breathing Light placed next to the rear speaker. Encased in a smoky, semi-transparent shell, the adjustable lighting system glows in rhythm with alerts, calls, or even personalized contact settings. Talk about adding flair to function.

The rest of the phone’s construction is more practical. The glossy plastic back fends off fingerprints, the flat silver frame houses all the keys on the right side, and the red power button doubles as a dependable fingerprint scanner.
Display and multimedia performance
The nubia Music Pro sports a 6.7-inch IPS LCD with a 120Hz refresh rate—something you don’t usually see in this price bracket. Resolution is capped at HD+ and the bezels are on the thick side, but the smooth refresh rate keeps scrolling and animations feeling responsive.

Of course, the real star is the speaker system. The nubia Music Pro houses a triple-speaker setup—with drivers at the top, bottom, and rear—capable of hitting up to 95dB. It’s easily one of the loudest speakers I’ve seen on a sub-P5,000 phone and it can fill a 20sqm room with ease.
As for quality, we’d say it’s decent for casual listening, with mids and highs coming through clearly and distortion kept in check at high volume. However, don’t expect a full-bodied thump from the bass.

Living up to its “Music Pro” name, this phone goes all-in on sound. You can switch it to Bluetooth speaker mode and stream tunes from another gadget, or fire up the FM radio without needing to plug in earphones. And yes—there’s still a headphone jack for your trusty wired cans.

Camera
While it won’t win any photography awards, the nubia Music Pro’s 50MP main camera is good enough for everyday snaps. Outdoor photos come out clear and colorful, but dim lighting quickly exposes its limits with more noise and less detail.
The 5MP selfie camera is passable for video calls and casual shots, while video recording is capped at 1080p on both ends. In short, the Music Pro is best suited for quick social posts, not serious photography.






Performance
Under the hood, the nubia Music Pro runs on a Unisoc T7200 processor with 4GB RAM (expandable virtually to 8GB) and 128GB storage. For everyday use—social media, streaming, messaging—it’s perfectly capable. Lighter games run smoothly, while more demanding titles will push the limits of its hardware.

The phone ships with Android 14-based MyOS 14 with minimal bloatware. There’s a dedicated Music Box section where you can select features to tweak your audio experience, .
The 5000mAh battery lasts a solid day and a half of moderate use. Alas, charging is capped at 10W, which feels painfully slow in 2025.
Speed says

The nubia Music Pro isn’t trying to be everything to everyone. If you’re after blazing-fast charging or high-end cameras, this isn’t the phone for you. But if you want a fun, affordable device that puts music and personality front and center, the Music Pro delivers in spades.
At P4,299, you get a phone that looks unique, sounds louder than anything in its class, and lasts a full day without worry. It won’t outshine your Bluetooth speaker in sound quality, but it comes close—while also being your everyday phone.




