Infinix GT50 Pro debuts with HydroFlow cooling, GT triggers for gamers
YUNA fronts the GT50 Pro launch as Infinix leans on HydroFlow cooling and GT triggers to chase the gaming pain points that actually ruin matches.

Infinix launched the GT50 Pro on April 24 with a blunt gaming pitch: keep the phone cool, keep the inputs responsive and keep the match from slipping away when heat starts to build. YUNA, the brand’s global ambassador, was the face of that message, and the timing made the intent clear. This was not a generic phone launch dressed up with a game icon. It was a direct play for mobile players who care about heat, throttling, battery drain and touch delay more than headline specs.
The two features Infinix chose to lead with tell the story. HydroFlow cooling is there to control temperatures during long sessions, when a phone can go from comfortable to unpleasant in a few rounds. GT triggers are the other half of the pitch, giving players dedicated controls instead of forcing every action through the touchscreen. For competitive play, that matters. A better trigger setup can make aiming, braking or skill activation feel cleaner, especially in fast games where missed taps and late swipes are the difference between a win and a wipe.
YUNA’s endorsement gives the GT50 Pro a recognizable face, but the real test is simpler than launch chatter. Does the phone stay steady when the game session runs long, and do the triggers make enough of a difference to justify buying a gaming-branded device instead of a standard phone with a game mode? Those are the questions that matter to players who sit through ranked grind, not keynote slides.
That is why the GT50 Pro fits Infinix’s push for dedicated gaming hardware. It is aimed at readers who want a phone that looks and behaves like it was built for play first, with cooling and physical controls treated as core features rather than garnish. If HydroFlow cooling does its job and the GT triggers feel as useful as they sound, Infinix has a strong case for a device that earns its gaming label on the thumb, not just in the marketing copy.
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