Realme 15T Listed on Geekbench: Release Date, Specifications, Price
The realme 15T has finally appeared on Geekbench, stirring up excitement in the smartphone world just when we were all starting to think August's news cycle was running dry. Yup, according to the listing, it’s packing the model number RMX5111, putting all those “leak” rumors to rest with a single screenshot.

The release? Happening later this month August 2025. Official dates are still under wraps, but multiple reports say the 15T should hit Indian shelves before September, lining up next to its siblings, the realme 15 and 15 Pro. There’s something about this time of year — maybe it’s old annual launches and monsoon season — that gives you the urge to buy something shiny and digital.
Now for the fun part: specs. The Geekbench scores — 806 (single-core) and 1,989 (multi-core) — tell us this thing isn’t a flagship killer, but it’s no slouch, either. Inside is a MediaTek Dimensity 6400 Max, paired with 8GB of RAM (though higher options are likely), running Android 15. Rumor has it you’ll get 128GB and 256GB variants, with an enticing possible 12GB RAM model for folks who live dangerously with their background apps. Expect three color options: flowing silver, silk blue, and suit titanium — all very “realme” names, if you ask me. I cracked up at “suit titanium.” Is it a phone or part of Iron Man’s wardrobe?.
The screen is tipped at 6.77 inches (AMOLED, 120Hz), which is frankly massive — great for bingeing K-dramas or doomscrolling. The battery? A hearty 6,000mAh, plus 45W fast charging. Cameras? We’re talking 50MP main, 2MP depth, 16MP selfies — so, Instagram’s gonna love you even if your dog’s bored by your endless “portrait mode” experiments. And yes, it’s 5G ready, Bluetooth 5.4, USB Type-C. But — no headphone jack. Anyone else still miss wired headphones on trains? Just me?.
As for the price, it looks set to come in at around ₹16,999 in India, making it a solid contender in the budget-to-midrange segment. It might not break benchmarks, but, speaking from four years of rotating between budget phones, it feels like one of those launches that deliver: enough power to binge, scroll, snap photos, and still make it through a day without plugging in at 6 pm. You know, real life, not promo-life.