Huawei Router X3 Pro: Artful Design Meets 3570 Mbps Wi-Fi

Huawei’s Router X3 Pro mixes sculptural design and dynamic lighting with a 3570 Mbps theoretical peak, Wi‑Fi 7+ support, PLC 3.0 mesh expansion and gamer-focused features — aiming at style-conscious homes.

Comments
Huawei Router X3 Pro: Artful Design Meets 3570 Mbps Wi-Fi

4 Minutes

Huawei is pushing home networking into the design-forward era with the Router X3 Pro — a transparent, sculptural router that aims to be as much a conversation piece as it is a Wi-Fi hub. Launched with the poetic theme “Golden Mountain Under the Sun,” the X3 Pro blends decorative lighting and a miniature mountain sculpture with real performance upgrades aimed at larger homes and modern devices.

A router that looks like art — and acts like one

The X3 Pro’s clear shell exposes a handcrafted internal sculpture and a dynamic “sunrise” lighting effect that spills soft illumination around a room. A smaller sub-router mirrors that approach with a more subtle halo you can toggle with a tap. Both units are controllable through the Huawei Smart Life app, which lets you adjust brightness, lighting schedules and advanced network settings from your phone.

Performance specs that matter

Under the aesthetic exterior, Huawei packed hardware aimed at contemporary Wi-Fi demands. The main unit ships with 512MB of RAM and 128MB of storage and delivers multi-band throughput designed for busy households:

  • 2.4GHz speeds up to 688 Mbps
  • 5GHz speeds up to 2882 Mbps
  • Combined theoretical peak: 3570 Mbps

Connectivity includes two 2.5Gbps-capable Ethernet ports that can automatically switch between WAN and LAN roles, plus a standard gigabit port on the main unit and a gigabit port on the sub-router.

Range, antennas and home coverage

Huawei says the standalone X3 Pro covers around 90m², and adding the sub-router expands coverage to roughly 90–120m² — a meaningful bump for multi-room apartments and mid-sized homes. The main unit houses six Wi‑Fi antennas, including one transparent antenna etched with micron-level tech. Combined with Huawei’s signal-management algorithm, the system actively balances connected devices to keep speeds stable during heavy use.

Smarter internals: chips, PLC and gaming features

At the silicon level, the X3 Pro runs on Huawei’s Lingxiao chip and features four signal amplifiers. It supports Wi‑Fi 7+ capabilities intended to smooth handoffs between 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks. For homes where wireless backhaul struggles, Huawei added PLC 3.0 support via a Lingxiao PLC chip, allowing the main router to network with up to 15 sub-routers over existing electrical wiring — handy for multi-floor setups.

Gamers get attention here as well: a “Game Turbo” mode promises latency reductions across more than 160 titles, while other additions include dual-band roaming, a dedicated IoT channel, parental controls, guest Wi‑Fi, WPA3 encryption and Huawei HomeSec protection. Thermal design is handled by a second-generation shark-fin fan to keep the device cool under load.

Price and availability

Pricing is straightforward: the main router costs 1,299 yuan, the sub-router 799 yuan, or you can buy the set for 1,999 yuan. The X3 Pro is already available in the Rizhao Jinshan region in China, and Huawei appears to be testing market appetite for premium-looking networking hardware that can also deliver on speed and features.

Who should consider the X3 Pro?

If you care about interior design as much as latency and coverage, the X3 Pro delivers a rare combination: a decorative piece that doubles as a high-performance router. Tech-forward homeowners who need robust throughput, mesh expansion via PLC, and gamer-oriented features will find plenty to like. For buyers focused only on raw specs or budget pricing, there are cheaper alternatives — but few of them come with a built-in art installation.

Source: gizmochina

Leave a Comment

Comments