Some phones arrive in your life quietly, while others like to make a bold entrance. The realme GT 7 Dream Edition walked in like it owned the room. I’ve had it in my hands for only a few days, and already it feels like realme is playing in a different league here.
Even the unboxing experience leans into the fantasy. It felt less like setting up a gadget and more like sliding into the driver’s seat of something fast and expensive. The box itself sets the tone. You pull out an Aston Martin-branded device that isn’t just “inspired” by Formula 1, it lives in that world. The curves, the colour accents, even the way it catches the light – it’s got that “just stepped out of the pit lane” energy. And yes, the SIM ejector pin shaped like a racecar is a small detail, but it’s the kind of thing that makes you smile before you’ve even powered it on. It’s a statement piece for Formula 1 fans who want their tech to match their adrenaline.

Holding it is another story. It’s premium without the “too precious to touch” syndrome. The IceSense graphene back doesn’t just sound cool in the press release. It actually feels cooler in the hand, which is something you notice when you’re using it for a while. Then there’s the screen – a 6.78-inch LTPO AMOLED panel that gets so bright at 6,000 nits you almost wonder if it’s competing with the sun. On a clear South African afternoon, it still looks vivid and sharp without you having to crank it up.
Right now, I’ve only spent a few days with it, so I’m still in the honeymoon phase. First impressions are like qualifying laps: they’re exciting, but they don’t decide the race. Over the next week, I’ll be finding out if that Dimensity 9400e chip really delivers, if the massive 7,000 mAh battery paired with 120 W charging, is as endless as it sounds, and if the cameras can keep up with the pace the rest of the phone is setting.
At R18,999, and available from Vodacom, Takealot, Amazon, Cellucity, and Dunns Online, it’s not trying to be the safe, middle-of-the-road option. This is realme putting its foot on the accelerator.
The question is whether it can hold that speed all the way to the finish line.
Full review coming soon.