It’s easy to do once you’re there, but to get there it’s essential you add your games to Poco’s gaming mode called Game Turbo. They’re configured like other examples, where you move on-screen indicators over the virtual buttons you want to link to the physical buttons. The Poco F4 GT’s shoulder buttons do work well, but you have to jump through a few hoops to get them going. It would have made for a sleeker-looking phone, emphasized any magnetic aspect in the motion, and overall made the F4 GT feel more special. I appreciate the reliability of physical controls, but I’d have loved to see an on-screen system to make the buttons pop up. The motion is slick enough that they have the same appeal as a fidget spinner, unfortunately. Hiding the physical shoulder buttons is good because it means they can’t be accidentally pressed, but they’re activated using two quite larger sliders which ruin the sleekness of the phone and can be easily slid aside either accidentally or purposefully. No, I don’t really know what makes them magnetic, why it says ‘freezing’ and ‘speediest’ next to the camera, or why the flash is shaped like Harry Potter’s scar. This is how the Poco F4 GT’s ‘magnetic’ shoulder buttons work.
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