While the Z5 Pro GT and Z5 Pro look identical from afar, the former stands out with a red metallic frame around the screen, red rims around both main cameras, plus a carbon fibre pattern beneath the glass on the back. The rest is basically the same as before: You get a 6.39-inch 2,340 x 1,080 AMOLED display, a 16MP + 24MP dual rear cameras, 16MP + 8MP (infrared) front cameras, 3,350mAh battery, NFC, dual nano SIM slots and a 3.5mm headphone jack dongle for the USB-C port.

Sadly, this also includes the awkward placement of the earpiece between the front cameras, which forces you to slide the screen down for phone calls. Worse yet, the lack of some US-friendly LTE bands means this phone is out of the question for a good majority of our readers, unless Lenovo has plans to bring it to the States later on (which is very unlikely).

Despite being the first 12GB RAM smartphone, the Z5 Pro GT won't be available for pre-order until January 15th next year, ahead of the official launch on the 24th. Prices range from 2,698 yuan or about $390 for the 6GB RAM + 128GB storage version, all the way to 4,398 yuan or about $640 for the 12GB RAM + 512GB storage top model.

Announced alongside the Z5 Pro GT is the cheaper Z5s, which is sadly an obvious rip-off of Huawei's P20 Pro -- especially its over-all size and triple camera layout on the back. The difference? Its fingerprint reader is on the back, it has a 6.3-inch 1080p LCD instead of OLED, and it went with a smaller "water drop" notch.

Like the Z5 Pro, the Z5s is powered by a mid-range Snapdragon 710 chipset, and it packs up to 6GB of RAM plus up to 128GB of storage. There's also a 3,300mAh battery, a 3.5mm headphone jack and dual nano SIM slots (one of which doubles as a microSD slot), yet NFC is missing here. As for cameras, there's a 16MP f/1.8 + 8MP f/2.4 + 5MP f/2.4 setup on the back to offer 2x telephoto zoom and bokeh shots, whereas on the front there's a 16MP f/2.0 camera. This is available for pre-ordering today starting from 1,398 yuan or about $200 for the 4GB RAM + 64GB storage model.

It's been a rough ride for Lenovo's mobile division. The company went from being one of the top smartphone vendors in China in 2014 to a no-namer in recent rankings. It'll be interesting to see whether Lenovo's latest mobile strategy will help it regain ground back at home. We've already seen the likes of Xiaomi and Honor releasing their own all-screen sliders over there recently, whereas Vivo shifted from a pop-up front camera to a dual-screen phone in order to keep its all-screen design. While both types of form factor have yet to prove themselves, it goes to show that Lenovo needs to do more to impress consumers, so here's hoping that it has more tricks up its sleeve.

Video

Presenter: Cherlynn Low

Script: Cherlynn Low

Script Editor: Nathan Ingraham

Camera: Kiel Perez

Editor: Chris Schodt

Producer: Michael Morris