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Design, build quality, handling
Let’s start with the most obvious part of the design, which has to be the back side of the GT 30 Pro. All types of aggressive geometric patterns cover it, as you would expect on a gaming phone.
As mentioned, Infinix did not forget to include some RGB lights on the back of the phone. There are a total of four RGB strips – two longer and two shorter ones. You get some control over the lighting patterns, but not too much. What you can choose, however, is what conditions trigger the lights, like gaming, recording video or being on a call.

The GT 30 Pro has a black outline on its back side, which almost creates the illusion that there is an actual second display on the back. An interesting choice for sure.
The GT 30 Pro seems to come in a trio of colors: Dark Flare, Blade White and Shadow Ash. Our review unit is in the Dark Flare color, and as far as we understand it, it is the only one of the three that actually has RGB LEDs on the back. The other two variants still have the LEDs and the same general design, but the LEDs can only shine in white.

Now, let’s talk about buttons and controls. Of course, the highlight in this department is the two capacitive touch shoulder controls on the side of the phone. These capacitive controls work quite well and are fast and responsive. They can be mapped to on-screen controls.

Sure, you don’t really get any advanced features out of them, like swipe support or the ability to partition the buttons in two, but it is still a solid extra control scheme for gaming.
We spent some time playing with the shoulder triggers and can say confidently they work really well. The best use we personally found is probably a trigger within fps games like PUBG. That said, racing games also work quite well and we’re sure no gamer would turn down the convenience of two extra buttons in any game.
Other than that, the control scheme is pretty standard. Thankfully, the inclusion of the capacitive controls on the right side of the frame didn’t interfere with the other buttons too much. The power button and volume rockers remain well-positioned height-wise and comfortable to use.
Infinix GT 30 Pro
While there aren’t any controls on the left-hand side of the frame, the bottom side is pretty busy. Here, we have the dual Nano-SIM slot, main speaker, microphone, and Type-C port.
The top side is quite busy as well. You get a secondary speaker grill here, which is good to see since the audio output should be more balanced when the two speakers are firing on the same axis. There is a secondary microphone hole here as well.
The GT 30 Pro also has an IR blaster for controlling appliances and it sits on the top part of the frame too.
The GT 30 Pro uses an under-display fingerprint reader. It is of the standard optical variety. We have no complaints regarding it. The sensor is both speedy and accurate.

There are no visible sensors on the front of the device. Everything is nicely hidden away under the display. Even the earpiece is barely visible above the display.
The GT 30 Pro is mostly made of plastic. That includes the back side and the middle frame. There is a little bit of hollowness to the back, but nothing severe. It still feels perfectly solid with little to no flex. The back side of our black unit does gather quite a bit of grease and fingerprints, but they are not easily visible.

The middle frame is also made of plastic. It doesn’t try to look too metallic; instead, it’s going for a matte appearance.
The front of the GT 30 Pro is covered with Corning Gorilla Glass 7i, which is great to see. Also, the entire phone is mostly sealed and offers IP64 ingress protection – not the best, but definitely not basic.