Xiaomi has pushed out another round of HyperOS 3 bug fixes, and this one targets a familiar mix of flagship and Redmi devices: Xiaomi 17 Ultra, Xiaomi 15 Ultra, Redmi K90 Max, and Redmi Turbo 5. The company says the problems were confirmed on Chinese versions of those phones, which is usually how these repair lists start before the same fixes trickle to other models with shared software.

The latest patch is less about new features and more about cleaning up the mess that makes a phone feel unfinished. Interface glitches, gesture lag in the gallery, missing status bars in full-screen photo viewing, and SMS sending failures are all on the list; annoying in isolation, but the kind of bugs that make even expensive hardware feel cheap.

HyperOS 3 bug fixes for Xiaomi and Redmi devices

On the Xiaomi 17 Ultra and Xiaomi 15 Ultra, the company says it fixed bugs in settings, gallery gestures, full-screen photo display, and SMS sending. Those are basic interactions, which is exactly why they stand out: nobody buys a premium phone expecting the settings menu to act like a beta test.

Redmi models picked up their own repairs too. Xiaomi says it fixed icon display issues, audio problems in WeChat, and random crashes in Xiaomi Browser on the Redmi K90 Max, while the REDMI Turbo 5 got an autostart fix. The Redmi K80 also had Game Turbo settings reset issues addressed, and the Redmi K Pad 2 received fixes for split-screen problems.

  • Xiaomi 17 Ultra: settings interface, gallery gestures, full-screen photo view, SMS sending
  • Xiaomi 15 Ultra: settings interface, gallery gestures, full-screen photo view, SMS sending
  • Redmi K90 Max: icon display, WeChat audio, Xiaomi Browser crashes
  • REDMI Turbo 5: autostart behavior
  • Redmi K80: Game Turbo reset issues
  • Redmi K Pad 2: split-screen issues

There is a bigger pattern here. Xiaomi is doing what large Android vendors increasingly have to do: ship fast, then quietly mop up the edge cases across a family tree of devices that may share a core build but not quite the same quirks. The company also points out that some Chinese models later arrive globally under different names, which means a bug fix on one phone can end up saving headaches on another.

That matters for buyers outside China because the translation from Redmi to Poco is often just branding with a different coat of paint. Xiaomi says the Redmi Turbo 5 is the Poco X8 Pro, while the Redmi K80 is the Poco F7 Pro, so the current fixes could foreshadow what international users get later. The open question is whether Xiaomi can keep HyperOS 3 feeling polished enough that these patch notes stay boring, which is usually the highest compliment software can get.

Source: Ixbt

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